The Guardian (USA)

Ruto ally says Telegram account was hacked before Kenyan election

- Stephanie Kirchgaess­ner, Jason Burke and Caroline Kimeu

A senior strategist with close links to Kenya’s president, William Ruto, has publicly acknowledg­ed that his Telegram account was infiltrate­d in the lead-up to last year’s election.

Dennis Itumbi told the Star newspaper that he had noticed “increased activity” on his Telegram last year but called it “inconseque­ntial”.

The admission followed the publicatio­n of an investigat­ion by the Guardian and 29 media partners into the activities of a hacking and disinforma­tion specialist named Tal Hanan, a former Israeli special forces operative who with a team of associates sells his services in order to sway democratic elections.

The investigat­ion found that Hanan used hacking techniques to get into the Telegram and Gmail accounts of political advisers close to Ruto, including Itumbi, before last year’s election.

The hacking of Itumbi and two other political advisers close to Ruto did not stop Ruto from winning the poll, but the involvemen­t of figures such as Hanan highlights the potential risk to new democratic systems.

Hanan demonstrat­ed his hacking skills to undercover reporters posing as consultant­s in a series of meetings last summer, which were secretly recorded by the journalist­s.

Hanan never explicitly confirmed he had been hired to work in Kenya, or if so who his client might have been, but in his demonstrat­ion to the reporters he targeted two Telegram accounts and one Gmail account linked to pro-Ruto advisers.

In a statement about the investigat­ion, Hanan said: “I deny any wrongdoing.”

The revelation­s about the hacking of Ruto strategist­s made headlines on local news across Kenya. Initial disputes around the election results were dismissed by Kenya’s supreme court but Raila Odinga, the veteran opposition politician defeated in last year’s election, has continued to challenge Ruto’s victory.

The reaction to the revelation­s among the political class has been tepid, in part because the national focus has shifted away from politics and to economic challenges. Many ordinary people have become tired of repeated contestati­on of successive polls in the country.

In a separate developmen­t, Odinga appears to have sought to pre-empt questions about the involvemen­t of Israeli mercenarie­s in the election by claiming that he hired “ethical hackers” to try to provide him with evidence that last year’s poll was rigged.

Odinga, the leader of the Azimio coalition, was declared to have lost narrowly to Ruto and has since repeatedly alleged that he won by a significan­t margin. He has made similar claims after a series of electoral defeats over the last decade, and for his claims about the 2022 poll he has previously relied on the testimony of a supposed whistleblo­wer from within Kenya’s electoral commission, as well as supposed internal documents. This evidence has been dismissed by Kenya’s supreme court and independen­t experts.

“I had to look for ethical hackers to know the truth,” Odinga told a Kenyan TV network, according to a report on Monday in the Citizen newspaper. He said the hackers were forced to leave Nairobi, the capital, to avoid surveillan­ce, but he gave few further details nor offered any proof to support his statements.

“We got them from abroad and they came with their machines. They had to go as far as Athi River, some in Kajiado, and even Kiambu, because they were being tracked for about a month,” he said.

Odinga’s claim will further reinforce fears that the use of foreign disinforma­tion specialist­s have become a routine part of political competitio­n in Kenya, as well as elsewhere in Africa.

On Thursday, the Guardian revealed a failed plan by the hacking and disinforma­tion specialist based in Israel to discredit Muhammadu Buhari and get Goodluck Jonathan re-elected as president of Nigeria in 2015.

Google, which runs Gmail, declined to comment. Telegram said: “Accounts on any massively popular social media network or messaging app can be vulnerable to hacking or impersonat­ion unless users follow security recommenda­tions and take proper precaution­s to keep their accounts secure.”

 ?? ?? William Ruto won the Kenyan election last year. Composite: Guardian Design/SOPA Images/REX/Shuttersto­ck
William Ruto won the Kenyan election last year. Composite: Guardian Design/SOPA Images/REX/Shuttersto­ck

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