Hindustan Times (East UP)

Pegasus: Israeli probe finds police spied on citizen

- Agence France-Presse letters@hindustant­imes.com

ISRAEL WAS ROCKED LAST MONTH WHEN A LOCAL NEWS DAILY REPORTED POLICE USED PEGASUS ON CITIZENS, A CLAIM DENIED BY POLICE

JERUSALEM: An Israeli government probe into allegation­s of police spying on citizens using Pegasus malware on Monday said police successful­ly infected the phone of one individual subject to a court order.

The finding represents the first time the Israeli government has confirmed that the deeply controvers­ial spyware ostensibly developed by Israeli firm NSO Group as a counterter­ror tool for government clients - has been deployed against a citizen of the Jewish state.

But the probe, backed early this month by Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, challenged allegation­s in Israeli business daily Calcalist that police had hacked the phones of dozens of Israelis who were not criminal suspects.

“There is no indication that the Israeli police used the Pegasus system in its hands to infect, without a court order, a mobile phone from the list of people that was published in the press,” said the three-person investigat­ion team, headed by deputy attorney general Amit Merari.

But “two people who were subject to a court order authorisin­g tracking of computer communicat­ions were found”, and there was “an attempt at infection” in those two cases.

“The infection succeeded” in one of those cases, the investigat­ion found.

Pegasus enables users to remotely activate a phone’s microphone and camera and suck up the data inside.

The US blackliste­d NSO Group in November following a global investigat­ion that revealed Pegasus has been used by repressive regimes to target journalist­s, dissidents, diplomats and others.

Israel itself was then rocked last month when Calcalist reported police used Pegasus on citizens, a claim police denied.

The newspaper said ex-advisors of former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, as well as his son Avner, senior leaders of government ministries and protest leaders figured among a list of 26 people targeted by police using the malware.

A key witness in an ongoing trial of Netanyahu for alleged corruption was one of those named as a target. Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said the reported conduct was “unacceptab­le in a democracy”.

Calcalist said in an editorial on Monday that the preliminar­y probe “requires serious considerat­ion and a new check of the findings ... published in Calcalist”, promising to undertake such a check.

Anat Ben-David, associate professor of communicat­ion at the Open University of Israel and co-founder of Privacy Israel, said the probe’s findings “refute the claims made by Calcalist about the infection of these individual­s’ phones without a court order”.

Merari’s team said it will continue its probe to find whether Pegasus or other software was used without a court order on Israelis by extending the search beyond the 26 individual­s listed by Calcalist.

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