Hindustan Times (Delhi)

French agency confirms hacking of two journalist­s’ mobile phones

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

France’s cybersecur­ity agency has confirmed the mobile phones of two French journalist­s from the investigat­ive news outlet Mediapart were hacked with the Pegasus spyware, the first instance of such surveillan­ce being detected by a government agency.

The hacking of the phones of Lénaïg Bredoux and Edwy Plenel, the two journalist­s from Mediapart, was earlier detected by Amnesty Internatio­nal’s security lab as part of the reporting by an internatio­nal consortium of journalist­s on the targeting of 50,000 phone numbers around the world by clients of the Israeli firm NSO Group, which developed Pegasus.

Mediapart has published a series of reports on alleged corruption, influence peddling, money laundering and favouritis­m in the ₹59,000 crore (7.8

NEW DELHI:

billion euro) deal between France’s Dassault Aviation and India for 36 Rafale combat jets. Last month, a French judge was tasked with investigat­ing suspicions of corruption in the defence deal.

The hacking of their phones with Pegasus was confirmed by IT specialist­s from the Agence Nationale de la Securite des Systemes d’informatio­n (ANSSI) on Thursday, Mediapart reported. In both cases, the specialist­s reached the same conclusion­s as Amnesty Internatio­nal’s security lab regarding the “Pegasus infection, its modalities, dates and duration”, the report said. The phones of the two journalist­s were checked at the Paris headquarte­rs of ANSSI by specialist­s. This was part of a preliminar­y investigat­ion by the public prosecutor of Paris, Rémy Heitz, a day after Mediapart filed a formal complaint.

“This confirmati­on was recorded during the hearings, during which our two journalist­s explained why both the technical evidence and the chronologi­cal contexts designated the Moroccan intelligen­ce services as the operators of this espionage,” Mediapart said in its report in French.

France opened a probe into the matter after it emerged that French President Emmanuel Macron was among those targeted for surveillan­ce, apparently at the behest of Moroccan government agencies.

NSO Group, currently at the centre of a global controvers­y over misuse of its Pegasus spyware to hack phones of journalist­s and politician­s, has temporaril­y blocked several government clients from using its technology, an unnamed company employee told NPR on Thursday. The move came a day after Israeli authoritie­s conducted an inspection of NSO Group’s office over the reports of misuse of Pegasus.

 ?? ANI ?? Opposition leaders gather in the Well of the House during a protest in Rajya Sabha on July 27.
ANI Opposition leaders gather in the Well of the House during a protest in Rajya Sabha on July 27.

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