Israeli technology firm NSO Group, which grabbed global attention, including in India, amid allegations of misuse of its controversial spyware Pegasus, apparently has a large presence in the Europe Union with at least 22 contracts covering 12 of the 27 member states, a media report said on Wednesday.
Pegasus spyware and competing products make it possible to
infect the cell phone of the victim of the surveillance, and afterwards enable
the operator to eavesdrop on conversations, read apps with encrypted messages,
and provide total access to contacts and files on the device.
The Pegasus spyware enables eavesdropping in real time on
what is taking place around the cellphone by operating the camera and the
microphone.
Representatives of the European Parliament Committee of
Inquiry on Pegasus spyware recently visited Israel and learned from NSO
personnel that the company has active contracts with 12 European Union members,
daily Ha'aretz reported.
The replies of the Israeli cyber warfare company to the
committee's questions, which were obtained by the newspaper, reveal that the
company is now working with 22 security and enforcement organisations in the
EU, it added.
The company's representatives in their conversations and
exchanges with PTI have maintained that their spyware is used by
"government clients" to target terrorists and other serious crimes.
Members of the European Parliament Committee of Inquiry who
came to Israel are said to have been surprised to discover contracts with their
countries of origin.
The Committee's representatives visited Israel in recent
weeks "to learn in-depth about the local cyber warfare industry", and
held discussions with NSO employees, representatives of the Israeli Defence
Ministry and local experts.
Among the committee members was a Catalan legislator whose
cell phone was hacked by an NSO customer, the report noted.
"The committee was established after the publication of
Project Pegasus last year, and its objective is to create pan-European
regulations for the acquisition, import and use of cyber warfare software such
as Pegasus," the report said.
"But while committee members were in Israel, and
particularly since their return to Brussels, it was revealed that Europe also
has a well-developed cyber warfare industry – and many of its customers are
European countries," it said.
The EU legislators were tasked to know the identity of NSO
customers in Europe at present and were surprised to discover that most of the
EU countries had contracts with the company: 14 countries have done business
with NSO in the past and at least 12 are still using Pegasus for lawful
interception of mobile calls, as per NSO's response to the committee's
questions.
In response to the legislators' questions, the company
explained that at present NSO works with 22 “end users” – security and
intelligence organisations and law enforcement authorities – in 12 European
countries.
In some of the countries there is more than one client as
they are with operating organisations, the report said.
In the past, as per NSO's submission, the company worked
with two additional countries with whom the ties have now been severed. NSO did
not disclose which countries are active customers and with which two countries
the contract was frozen, it said.
NSO reportedly did not respond to Haaretz's request for
comment.
Israel, earlier in January this year, distanced itself from
the controversy triggered by the blacklisting of the NSO Group after
allegations of illegal use of its Pegasus spyware to target government
officials, activists and journalists globally, saying that it is a private
company and it has nothing to do with the policies of the Israeli government.
"NSO is a private company, it is not a governmental
project and therefore even if it is designated, it has nothing to do with the
policies of the Israeli government," Israel's then Foreign Minister and
now Prime Minister Yair Lapid had said at a press conference days after the
company was blacklisted by the US Department of Commerce.