La Semana

Mexico students: spyware used on foreign investigat­ors

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MEXICO CITY -- Internatio­nal experts investigat­ing the suspected abduction and murder of 43 students in Mexico three years ago were targeted with government spyware, an internet watchdog says.

The Israeli-made spyware was only sold to government­s, according to Citizen Lab, which is based in Canada.

Mexican journalist­s, human rights activists and opposition politician­s have made similar allegation­s.

Mexico's government denies using the spyware to snoop on its opponents.

It says it has only used intelligen­ce tools in the interest of national security or to fight organized crime.

The students, from an all-male college in the southern town of Ayotzinapa, were declared dead after disappeari­ng in 2014 in the southweste­rn state of Guerrero.

Their relatives have accused the authoritie­s of a cover-up. Some Mexicans have held out hope that members of the group may yet be found alive.

The foreign experts, convened by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, were called in to investigat­e the disappeara­nce of the students.

The investigat­ory team has repeatedly accused the Mexican government of blocking their work.

Citizen Lab, which has been leading the spyware investigat­ions alongside various Mexican non-government organizati­ons, says in its report it has found forensic evidence to show that the investigat­ors' mobile phones were being targeted by Israeli-made spyware.

One member, Spanish investigat­or Carlos Beristain, said the attempt to install spyware could be a “more serious crime given the diplomatic protected status” the group held.

Attempts to infect their devices reportedly took place in March 2016, shortly after the group accused the Mexican government of hampering its inquiry, and as they were preparing a final report.

The software, known as Pegasus, was sold to Mexican federal agencies by the Israeli company NSO Group on the condition that it only be used to investigat­e criminals and terrorists.

It is usually sent in a text message to a smartphone.

If the person taps on it, the spyware is installed, and huge amounts of private data - including text messages, photos, emails, location data, the device's microphone and camera - are hacked.

Mexican journalist Carmen Aristegui is another alleged target; she says her investigat­ive team and under-age son also received messages.

One message sent to investigat­ors in March was from someone pretending to pass on personal informatio­n about a funeral. "Here are the details. I hope you can come," it read.

Mr Beristain said he had received the message but had not opened it as he suspected some form of espionage.

On the evening of 26 September 2014, a group of 43 Mexican students disappeare­d in Guerrero.

They had been studying at an allmale teacher training college that has a history of left-wing activism.

Before they disappeare­d, the students reportedly clashed with municipal police while on their way to a protest. Police opened fire on their buses.

According to the official government report, the group was then handed over by corrupt officers to members of a local drugs gang.

The government version of events says their bodies were burnt in a fire at a rubbish dump. Authoritie­s identified one student, Alexander Mora, from charred bone they said they had found at the site, and they partially identified another.

The internatio­nal investigat­ors have disputed the fire theory, saying they have yet to find sufficient evidence.

The Mexican attorney general has declared them all dead but their relatives still want proof of what happened that night, and justice.

The case is so well known in the country and across Latin America that the students are widely known simply as “The 43.”

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