Business Day

Former Twitter staffers in court on spy charges

- Robert Burnson San Francisco

Two former Twitter employees and a Saudi national were charged by the US with helping the government in Riyadh spy on dissidents who used the social network.

The employees, one from Twitter’s hometown of San Francisco and one in Saudi Arabia, were allegedly recruited to use their company credential­s to gain access to the accounts of “users of interest” to the Saudi royal family, according to a criminal complaint unsealed on Wednesday.

“Saudi agents mined Twitter’s internal systems for personal informatio­n about known Saudi critics and thousands of other Twitter users,” US attorney David Anderson said.

The charges show a dark side of Twitter’s mission to be a free and open forum where everyone has a voice and anyone can speak truth to power. Even as the platform has served as an outlet for criticism of repressive regimes, it has also proven useful to those regimes for tracking down and punishing critics. Human rights bodies have tallied dozens of Twitter-related prosecutio­ns in Saudi Arabia.

Twitter said it is committed to protecting those who use its service and applauded the US justice department’s actions. At the same time, the company is being sued by a prominent Saudi dissident who alleges the company put his family in danger by failing to tell him about a hack into his account that he attributes to one of the men charged in the US complaint, Ali Alzabarah.

Prosecutor­s say Alzabarah, 35, of Saudi Arabia, and Ahmad Abouammo, 41, most recently of Seattle, were recruited by a third Saudi, Ahmed Almutairi, 30, who was working on behalf of the royal family. All three are charged with acting as illegal agents of a foreign government. Abouammo is also charged with creating a false $100,000 (R1.48m) invoice for consulting services to the Saudi government to cover up his activities when he was questioned by the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion. Only Abouammo was arrested; the other two are not in the US, officials said.

The criminal complaint traces Abouammo’s involvemen­t with the Saudi government back to 2014, when he worked in one of Twitter’s San Francisco offices as a media partnershi­p manager for the Middle East and Africa. That is when he allegedly agreed to meet in London with an unidentifi­ed member of the inner circle of the Saudi crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman.

After the official gave him an expensive wrist watch, Abouammo started collecting informatio­n on Twitter users and maintained regular contact with the official, who wired him hundreds of thousands of dollars in payments, prosecutor­s say.

Even after Abouammo left Twitter in 2015 and took a new job in Seattle, he continued to do the bidding of the Saudi official by enlisting the help of former Twitter colleagues, according to the complaint.

Prosecutor­s allege that Alzabarah was similarly recruited by Saudi intelligen­ce operatives, though he travelled to Washington in 2015 to meet with a person identified in the complaint as “Royal Family Member-1”.

The Washington Post, which reported on the complaint earlier, said “Royal Family Member1” is Mohammed bin Salman.

After returning to San Francisco, Alzabarah allegedly accessed the private data of more than 6,000 Twitter users, including at least 60 on whom Saudi law enforcemen­t officials had sought informatio­n through official Twitter channels. After Twitter fired him, he later joined a charitable foundation in Saudi

Arabia where he worked with a team “to monitor and manipulate” social media, according to the complaint.

Prosecutor­s say Almutairi ran a Saudi social media marketing company for the members of the Saudi royal family. He allegedly met with Abouammo before the London trip and also met Alzabarah.

“We recognise the lengths bad actors will go to try and undermine our service,” Twitter said in a statement. “Our company limits access to sensitive account informatio­n to a limited group of trained and vetted employees. We understand the incredible risks faced by many who use Twitter to share their perspectiv­es with the world and to hold those in power accountabl­e. We have tools in place to protect their privacy and their ability to do their vital work.”

Officials at the Saudi embassy in Washington did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The dissident who sued Twitter in October claims Saudi agents — through informatio­n about his account provided by Alzabarah in 2015 — were able to plant malware on his phone in 2018 and spy on his activities.

Omar Abdulaziz alleges that is how Saudi spies discovered plans for a social media protest he was planning with Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi. Months later, Khashoggi was slain in the Saudi embassy in Istanbul.

Twitter declined to comment on Abdulaziz’s lawsuit.

 ?? /AFP ?? Chirped: Three men were charged in San Francisco on Wednesday with spying on critics of the Saudi royal family.
/AFP Chirped: Three men were charged in San Francisco on Wednesday with spying on critics of the Saudi royal family.

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