MEP calls on Irish authorities to investigate if Pegasus spyware was used on citizens here
FRANCIS FITZGERALD HAS called for the Irish National Cyber
Security Centre to investigate the use of Pegasus software in Ireland following
reports of its use to spy on citizens in several countries.
MEP Fitzgerald is a member of the European Parliament
Committee that is investigating the use of this software following reports of
its use to hack phones and online systems.
The Pegasus phone-hacking software belongs to NSO Group,
which is based in the Israeli coastal city of Herzliya and headed by CEO Shalev
Hulio, a co-founder of the spy-tech firm.
Pegasus spyware infiltrates mobile phones to extract data or
activate a camera or microphone to spy on their owners.
NSO Group says the software is only sold to government
agencies to target criminals and terrorists with the green light of Israeli
authorities.
However, several reports from around the world have
suggested that the software has been used to spy on citizens including
journalists, civic society groups, and governments, in countries such as Spain,
Mexico, the UK, Poland, Hungary, and France.
The independent group Citizen Lab, which includes
journalists and academics, has been researching the use of Pegasus software in
45 countries. The journalistic group Forbidden Stories has claimed that over
180 journalists around the world have been targeted by Pegasus users.
Fitzgerald said: “In Ireland, we need to take cyber security
seriously. Pegasus is a quasi-military spyware tool, which is now reported to
be used by certain organisations and governments to tap the phones of public
figures by effectively turning smartphones in remote listening devices.
“In Ireland we have no information on the extent to which
Pegasus is being used and against whom. This represents a serious cybersecurity
concern. That is why I am calling on the Government to fully resource and
empower the National Cyber Security Centre, working with An Garda Síochána if
necessary, to review the use of Pegasus Software in Ireland. The first step in
protecting our democracy is knowing the full extent of what is happening.”
According to reports, recent targets of the spyware include
reporters and opposition politicians in Poland and Hungary, the Spanish Prime
Minister and Defence Minister, MEPs, Commissioners, including EU Justice
Commissioner Didier Reynders, and the Number 10 Downing Street network.
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