UAE allegedly hacked Financial Times editor
The United Arab Emirates may have used Israeli spyware to hack a mobile phone belonging to the editor of the UK's Financial Times newspaper, a major investigation has found.
Lebanese-born Roula Khalaf, who became last year the
London-based paper’s first-ever female editor, was one of more than 180
journalists around the world selected as candidates for surveillance by
government clients of the Israeli NSO group, according to the Guardian.
The investigation found that the UAE, which has deployed NSO
spyware in the past, was also possibly behind the hacking of journalists at The
Economist and Wall Street Journal, and may have deployed malware against a
further 10,000 phone numbers belonging to activists and lawyers.
NSO spyware was implicated in the gruesome killing of
Khashoggi, a Middle East Eye and Washington Post columnist who was dismembered
by a Saudi hit squad in Riyadh's Istanbul consulate and whose body has never
been found.
NSO, which is subject to regulation by Israel's minister of
defence, has been embroiled in a series of hacking scandals in recent years and
is being sued by Facebook.
The investigation by the Guardian and 16 other media
organisations suggested the continuing abuse of NSO’s hacking spyware, Pegasus,
which the company insists is solely intended to fight “serious crime and
terrorism.”
In addition to the UAE, the investigation found that the
governments of Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Hungary, India, Kazakhstan, Mexico,
Morocco, Rwanda and Saudi Arabia all selected journalists as possible
surveillance targets.
The UAE is thought to have picked Khalaf as a potential
hacking target in 2018, when she was deputy editor at the FT.
Her number was included in a leaked list of mobile phone
numbers selected for possible surveillance by NSO clients.
However, the presence of her phone number in the data does
not reveal whether she was subject to an attempted hack.
Nonetheless, NSO’s flagship product, Pegasus, allows
operators to extract messages, photos and emails, record calls and secretly
activate microphones on Iphones and Android devices.
'Who are my sources?'
Also listed in the leaked records is a phone number
belonging to American journalist Bradley Hope, who at the time of his selection
was an employee at the Wall Street Journal.
Hope had been fact-checking the draft of a book on 1MDB, the
multi-billion dollar Malaysian corruption scandal that led to the prosecution
of that country’s prime minister, Najib Razak.
The book suggested that some of the money was spent on a
luxury yacht for Sheikh Mansour, a senior Abu Dhabi royal who is the UAE's =deputy
prime minister and owner of Manchester City Football Club.
The UAE is believed to be behind Hope’s listing.
“I think probably the number one thing that anyone targeting
my phone would want to know is: who are my sources?” Hope told the Guardian.
“They would want to know who it is that is providing this insight.”
Egyptian and Qatari phone numbers belonging to Greg
Carlstrom, a Middle East reporter at the Economist, were also listed, in what
is also believed to be an attempted hack by the UAE.
'Press freedoms are vital'
Rights groups have previously sounded the alarm at the use
of spyware by the UAE and other Gulf nations.
In 2018, Citizen Lab, a research and development
organisation at the University of Toronto, said that it had witnessed
“significant expansions” of the usage of Pegasus in Saudia Arabia, UAE and
Bahrain.
Riyadh had reportedly used Pegasus to track and spy on Saudi
journalist Jamal Khashoggi prior to his killing in the Saudi embassy in
Istanbul in October 2018. US intelligence agencies said in February that the
Saudi de facto leader, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, was responsible for
Khashoggi's death.
Saudi authorities also used Pegasus to bug phones during a
so-called anti-corruption campaign ordered by bin Salman, during which members
of the Saudi royal family, government ministers and business tycoons were
rounded up and detained in the Ritz Carlton hotel in Riyadh in November 2017.
Human rights defender Ahmed Mansour, held in solitary
confinement in an Emirati prison since 2017, was targeted by Pegasus spyware.
In December, 36 journalists, producers, anchors and
executives at Qatari news channel Al Jazeera said that their phones had been
hacked with Pegasus by the governments of Saudi Arabia and UAE.
Backed by the likes of tech-giants Microsoft and Google,
Facebook is currently locked in a legal battle with NSO group, accusing the
Israeli firm of seeking to infect approximately 1,400 "target
devices" with malicious spyware that could be used to steal user
information from WhatsApp, a messaging application owned by Facebook.
In a statement to the Guardian and partner organisations,
NSO denied the investigation's “false claims” but said that it would “continue
to investigate all credible claims of misuse and take appropriate action”.
The company added: “NSO Group is on a life-saving mission,
and the company will faithfully execute this mission undeterred, despite any
and all continued attempts to discredit it on false grounds.”
A spokesperson for the Financial Times told the Guardian:
“Press freedoms are vital, and any unlawful state interference or surveillance
of journalists is unacceptable.”
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