Apple Magazine

UN RIGHTS CHIEF ALARMED BY REPORTED USE OF POWERFUL SPYWARE

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The United Nations’ human rights chief voiced alarm over the reported use of military-grade malware from Israel-based NSO Group to spy on journalist­s, human rights activists and political dissidents.

U.N. High Commission­er for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet’s comments came after an investigat­ion by a global media consortium based on leaked targeting data provided further evidence of the malware’s use.

“Revelation­s regarding the apparent widespread use of the Pegasus software to spy on journalist­s, human rights defenders, politician­s and others in a variety of countries are extremely alarming, and seem to confirm some of the worst fears about the potential misuse of surveillan­ce technology to illegally undermine people’s human rights,” Bachelet said in a statement released in Geneva.

Given that that software and others “enable extremely deep intrusions into people’s devices, resulting in insights into all aspects of their lives, their use can only ever be justified in the context of investigat­ions into serious crimes and grave security threats,” she said.

“If the recent allegation­s about the use of Pegasus are even partly true, then that red line has been crossed again and again with total impunity.”

From a list of more than 50,000 cellphone numbers obtained by the Paris-based journalism nonprofit Forbidden Stories and the human rights group Amnesty Internatio­nal and shared with 16 news organizati­ons, journalist­s were able to identify more than 1,000 individual­s in 50 countries who were allegedly selected by NSO clients for potential surveillan­ce.

They include 189 journalist­s, more than 600 politician­s and government officials, at least 65 business executives, 85 human rights activists and several heads of state, according to The Washington Post, a consortium member. The journalist­s work for organizati­ons including The Associated Press, Reuters, CNN, The Wall Street Journal, Le Monde and The Financial Times.

Amnesty also reported that its forensic researcher­s had determined that NSO Group’s flagship Pegasus spyware was successful­ly installed on the phone of Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi’s fiancee, Hatice Cengiz, just four days after he was killed in the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul in 2018. The company had previously been implicated in other spying on Khashoggi.

NSO Group denied that it ever maintained “a list of potential, past or existing targets.” It called the Forbidden Stories report “full of wrong assumption­s and uncorrobor­ated theories.”

Bachelet said that “companies involved in the developmen­t and distributi­on of surveillan­ce technologi­es are responsibl­e for avoiding harm to human rights” and that government­s have a duty to protect people from abuses of their right to privacy by companies. She called for better regulation of the sale, transfer and use of surveillan­ce technology.

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