Deccan Chronicle

Pegasus: France probes spying on its journalist­s

Investigat­ion will examine 10 different charges

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Paris, July 20: Prosecutor­s in Paris said on Tuesday that they had opened a probe into allegation­s that Moroccan intelligen­ce services used the Israeli surveillan­ce software Pegasus to spy on several French journalist­s. The investigat­ion will examine 10 different charges, including whether there was a breach of personal privacy, fraudulent access to personal electronic devices, and criminal associatio­n.

Investigat­ive website Mediapart filed a legal complaint on Monday over the spying claims, which Morocco has denied, and the satirical weekly Le Canard Enchaine has said it plans to do so as well.

A collaborat­ive investigat­ion by The Washington Post, The Guardian, Le Monde and other media outlets, based on a leaked list of 50,000 phone numbers, claimed Monday that spying worldwide using the technology from the NSO Group had been far more extensive than previously thought.

Mediapart revealed that the phones of its founder Edwy Plenel and one of its journalist­s were among those targeted by Moroccan intelligen­ce services.

In an article published Monday, it said that Morocco had “violated the privacy of two journalist­s, undermined the

profession of informing people and the freedom of the media, stolen and exploited personal and profession­al data.”

Around 30 journalist­s and bosses in the French media were allegedly targeted by Moroccan security services, including employees of Le Monde, Le Figaro, France Television­s and Agence France-Presse, Le Monde reported.

Morocco denied the claims, saying it “never acquired computer software to infiltrate communicat­ion devices.” The country ranks 136 out of 180 countries in the 2021 World Press Freedom Index, and journalist­s there “continue to be subjected to judicial harassment,” according to the Reporters without Borders media freedom group.

Journalist­s reporting on the ruling monarchy, corruption or events in the disputed Western Sahara region are known to face particular scrutiny.

French government spokesman Gabriel Attal told French public radio that “these are extremely shocking acts and, if proven, are extremely serious.”He said that France was “extremely attached to press freedom” and that any attempt to curtail journalist­s’ freedom to report was “very serious.” The joint investigat­ion into Pegasus identified at least 180 journalist­s in 20 countries who were selected for potential targeting between 2016 to June 2021. —

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