Two more Poland's Poles have been identified as victims of phone hacking
WARSAW, Poland -- Two more Poles have been identified as
victims of phone hacking with the notoriously powerful spyware from Israel’sNSO Group: an agrarian political leader at odds with Poland's right-wing
government and the co-author of a book about the head of Poland's secret
services.
The newest discovery by Citizen Lab cybersleuths broadens
the list of those allegedly targeted by state surveillance under Poland’s
nationalist government with a tool marketed for use exclusively against
criminals and terrorists.
In late December, the University of Toronto-affiliated
security researchers determined that a Polish senator, Polish lawyer and a
Polish prosecutor -- all three critics of Poland’s ruling Law and Justice party
were hacked with NSO’s Pegasus. They
were the first confirmations that a tool widely abused globally by repressive
governments had been used in the European Union country.
The finding triggered an inquiry in the
opposition-controlled Senate.
In its new findings, Citizen Lab found that Michal Kolodziejczak,
a 33-year-old farmer and agrarian social movement leader was hacked several
times in May 2019. That was months ahead of a fall election in which
Kolodziejczak was hoping to have his group, AGROunia, become a formal political
party. Support for his movement threatened to eat into a key constituency of
the ruling party, farmers and other voters in the Polish countryside. Courts
have so far blocked his efforts to form a political party.
The other target was Tomasz Szwejgiert, who says he
collaborated for years with Polish secret services before finding himself at
odds with powerful figures. He was hacked while co-authoring a book about the
head of Poland’s secret services, Mariusz Kaminski. He was hacked 21 times with
Pegasus from late March to June of 2019, intrusions that began after he and his
collaborators sent questions to the Polish government about Kaminski.
Replying to a request for comment, a Polish state security
spokesman, Stanislaw Zaryn, insisted that surveillance is only carried out in justified
cases and in accordance with the law. He said due to legal limitations he could
not give any details about whether specific people were surveilled.
However, he said reports about Szwejgiert's “connections
with the secret services are untrue,” and said the man has faced charges for
serious economic crimes.
In one case, he spent 11 months in prison in 2018 on
allegations of belonging to a criminal group that carried out a tax fraud
scheme that cost the state millions of zlotys (dollars). Another allegations is
that he pretended to work for the secret services in order to commit financial
fraud.
Szwejgiert told The Associated Press that he was innocent
and believes he was framed, insisting he had collaborated with the secret
services for years.
Pegasus is ultra-invasive. The hacker gets access to a
victim’s smartphone data and can surveil them in real time with the phone’s
microphone and camera. The Pegasus abuse cases worldwide highlight how such
technologies — used against journalists, dissidents, rights activists and
politicians -- pose a growing threat to democratic systems.
The revelations in Poland led ruling party leader Jaroslaw
Kaczynski to acknowledge publicly for the first time earlier this month that
Pegasus was bought by the Polish state. Kaczynski described it as a tool to
fight crime and denied that political opponents were targeted.
As the government sought to counter perceptions that the
state was engaged in mass surveillance, a ruling party lawmaker knowledgeable
about state security services, Marek Suski, said last Friday that the number
surveilled by the state did not exceed “several hundred people a year.”
The news drew headlines, however, shocking Poles who
considered the number anything but trivial.
John Scott-Railton, a senior researcher at the Citizen Lab
who found the forensic traces of hacking on the phones of all five Poles, said
he believes “there is more to be found.”
“In my experience, Pegasus abuses are often the canary in
the coal mine. What about other surveillance powers? Such as wiretapping and
internet monitoring? These can be harder for outsiders to prove, but are ripe
for abuse at a massive scale,” said Scott-Railton, who testified along with a
co-researcher to Poland's Senate commission last week.
Citizen Lab had previously confirmed the hacking of Ewa
Wrzosek, an independent prosecutor fighting government attempts to politicize
the judiciary, and Roman Giertych, a prominent lawyer who represents opposition
leaders including Donald Tusk, a former prime minister.
Another Pegasus hack confirmed by Citizen Lab was of Sen.
Krzysztof Brejza, who was running the opposition’s 2019 parliamentary election
campaign at the time. Messages stolen from his phone were doctored and used in
a smear campaign against him.
One aim of the Senate inquiry is to determine whether the
2019 election was fair under the circumstances. Kaczynski’s Law and Justice won
by a slim margin.
Kolodziejczak believed the elections could not have been
fair, given the hacking.
“They manipulate everyone’s choices in this way,” he said.
“If one party knows more, it is easier for them to convince you NOT to vote for
the others.”
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