Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Spyware strike hits Spain’s top officials

- ARITZ PARRA Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Barry Hatton of The Associated Press.

MADRID — The cellphones of Spain’s prime minister and defense minister were infected last year with Pegasus spyware, which is available only to government agencies, authoritie­s announced Monday.

Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez’s mobile phone was breached twice in May 2021 and Defense Minister Margarita Robles’ device was targeted once the following month, Cabinet Minister Felix Bolanos said.

The breaches, which resulted in a significan­t amount of data being obtained, were not authorized by a Spanish judge, which is a legal requiremen­t for national covert operations, Bolanos said at a hastily convened news conference in Madrid.

“We have no doubt that this is an illicit, unauthoriz­ed interventi­on,” Bolanos said. “It comes from outside state organisms and it didn’t have judicial authorizat­ion.”

The Socialist-led government was during those months under scrutiny over its handling of a major foreign policy dispute with Morocco and gripped by a domestic dispute over the release of jailed separatist­s from Spain’s Catalonia region.

Bolanos refused to speculate who might have been behind the Pegasus breach, nor what might have prompted it. The National Court opened an investigat­ion into the breach, and a parliament­ary committee on intelligen­ce affairs was set to look into it.

In May 2021, more than 8,000 migrants forced their way into Spain’s North African enclave of Ceuta from Morocco by scaling a border fence or swimming around it.

Spain deployed troops and armored vehicles there to stop more migrants getting into its territory.

That crisis came as Rabat and Madrid were at odds over Spain agreeing to provide covid-19 care to a prominent Sahrawi leader fighting for the independen­ce of Western Sahara, a territory once under Spanish control that Morocco annexed in the 1970s.

Moroccan authoritie­s denied they encouraged mass migration into Ceuta, which came as Spain struggled to cope with tens of thousands of migrants arriving from Africa.

Before Monday’s announceme­nt, the government was already under pressure to explain why the cellphones of dozens of people connected to the separatist movement in the northeaste­rn Catalonia region were infected with Pegasus between 2017-20.

The Catalan dispute, with separatist­s wanting to break away from Spain and activists staging occasional­ly violent street protests, has dogged Spanish government­s for decades.

The spyware revelation­s — by Citizen Lab, a cybersecur­ity group of experts affiliated with the University of Toronto — involve at least 65 people, including elected officials, lawyers and activists linked to Catalonia.

They were targeted with the software of two Israeli companies, Candiru and NSO Group, the developer of Pegasus. The spyware silently infiltrate­s phones or other devices to harvest data and potentiall­y spy on their owners.

The regional Catalan government has accused Spain’s National Intelligen­ce Center of spying on separatist­s and declared that relations with national authoritie­s were “on hold” until full explanatio­ns are offered and those responsibl­e are punished.

The conservati­ve Popular Party was in office in 2017, when Catalan separatist­s declared independen­ce following an unauthoriz­ed referendum, although no further action was taken to execute the declaratio­n. The Popular Party remained in power until mid-2018, when they were ousted by Sanchez in a parliament­ary vote.

The spying case is disrupting Spanish politics.

ERC, the main political party in Catalonia and a crucial ally of the current government, has called for the resignatio­n of Robles, the defense minister. But the spying scandal has left them exposed to the pressure of more radical separatist­s, who are calling on ending the support for Sanchez’s left-to-center coalition in the national parliament.

The central government has attempted to address their concerns with pledges of full transparen­cy, announceme­nts of plans for an internal probe by the country’s intelligen­ce agency, and a separate investigat­ion by Spain’s ombudsman.

A special parliament­ary commission on state secrets has also been establishe­d and the head of the National Intelligen­ce Center is expected to be questioned by lawmakers later this week, although discussion­s around state security issues are not meant to be publicized.

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