Bangkok Post

Govt denies using Israeli spyware on journalist­s

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SAN SALVADOR: The government of El Salvador has denied using the Israeli Pegasus software to spy on journalist­s and activists.

In a statement issued late on Wednesday, spokeswoma­n Sofia Medina said the government of populist President Nayib Bukele was “not a client” of Israeli firm NSO Group, which owns Pegasus.

She was reacting to an investigat­ion by Citizen Lab — a Canadian-based cyber security watchdog — which found that the mobile phones of 35 El Salvadoran journalist­s and NGO staff had been infected with Pegasus spyware between July 2020 and November last year.

Without pointing a finger at the government, Citizen

Lab said “the hacking took place while organisati­ons were reporting on sensitive issues involving the administra­tion of President Bukele”.

It did not identify the culprit, but said “there is a range of circumstan­tial evidence pointing to a strong El Salvador government nexus”.

Pegasus can turn smartphone­s into pocket spying devices, allowing the user to read the target’s messages, track their location, and even turn on their camera and microphone without their knowledge.

Whoever did it was not the government, Ms Medina insisted.

“I reiterate that the government of El Salvador does not have the resources or the licences to use this type of software,” she said.

The government was investigat­ing the possibilit­y that Pegasus “and other systems” had been used on Salvadoran territory, added Ms Medina, claiming there were indication­s that public officials had also been targeted by spyware.

Populist Bukele, 40, came to power in 2019 on a campaign against corruption and gang-related crime. But the social media-savvy president is accused by detractors of increasing authoritar­ianism.

In 2020, in a bid to intimidate MPs into approving a loan to finance an anti-crime plan, the president ordered heavily armed police and soldiers to storm parliament.

The move led to lawmakers calling or a congressio­nal committee to declare Mr Bukele “mentally incapable” of governing — a move he denounced as an “attempted parliament­ary coup”.

Mr Bukele was accused of breaking electoral rules in campaignin­g for his New Ideas party ahead of a legislativ­e vote last year in which his allies won an absolute majority, giving him farreachin­g powers.

The overhauled Congress soon dismissed all the judges of the Supreme Court’s constituti­onal chamber, as well as the attorney general.

The new-look chamber in turn gave the green light for Mr Bukele to run for re-election in 2024 despite a constituti­onal one-term limit.

 ?? ?? Bukele: Accused of authoritar­ianism
Bukele: Accused of authoritar­ianism

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