Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Amnesty 'categorica­lly' backs Pegasus findings amid denials

An Indian minister has slammed the leaked surveillan­ce list as "fake news." Kazakhstan said there was no "evidence" and Morocco said it planned to sue, as the Pegasus fallout showed no signs of easing up.

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Amnesty Internatio­nal stood by its investigat­ion over government­al abuse of spyware on Friday, as countries continued rushing to dispute the claims made.

The deputy head of Kazakhstan's presidenti­al administra­tion, Dauren Abayev, said media reports on the list of targets leaked to rights groups were no more than "rather intriguing informatio­n without any evidence."

A federal minister in the External Affairs Ministry of India called the Pegasus list "fake news" and said the index, which includes hundreds of Indian politician­s and journalist­s, is being used to undermine the demo

cratic institutio­ns of the country.

Meenakshi Lekhi, recently appointed as Minister of State, blamed opposition parties, many of whose members are on the leaked surveillan­ce list.

And Morocco has instructed a lawyer to file a defamation case

over the investigat­ion.

But Amnesty released a statement saying it "categorica­lly" stood by its investigat­ion.

"The data is irrefutabl­y linked to potential targets of NSO Group's Pegasus Spyware. The false rumors being pushed on social media are intended to distract from the widespread unlawful targeting of journalist­s, activists and others that the Pegasus Project has revealed," it said.

What is the Pegasus list?

The index identifies persons of interest to clients of Israeli spyware firm NSO. Those clients included government­s from around the world, who, in turn, were able to gain access to informatio­n via a targeted individual­s' mobile phone.

The software is able to switch on a phone's camera or microphone and harvest its data and is now at the center of a growing storm after a list of about 50,000 potential surveillan­ce targets was leaked. Amnesty, which led the investigat­ion with Forbidden Stories, a Paris-based non-profit organizati­on, shared its informatio­n with several media outlets, publishing the reports last weekend.

French President Emmanuel M a c ro n , m e a n w h i l e , h a s changed his cellphone and number after a French media report said he was potentiall­y targeted by the Pegasus spyware, a presidency official said Thursday.

 ??  ?? Amnesty is standing by the findings of the Pegasus project
Amnesty is standing by the findings of the Pegasus project

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