21.7 C
Pakistan
Friday, September 20, 2024

Pegasus; France’s silence and Germany’s avoidance of Israeli spyware

A German media outlet, noting that the French cybersecurity agency has confirmed spying by Pegasus software, also reported the continued silence and defensive stance of Paris on this issue and also wrote: The German government also avoids addressing this issue.

In a report on the Pegasus malware spy project, the Zoddeutsche Zeitung newspaper wrote: The French cyber security agency (Annecy) has found traces of Pegasus spy software on the phone of a France 24 journalist.

French investigators also examined the phones of reporters named “Advi Planel” and “Lennag Berdox” and were able to prove contacts with this spyware.

The two journalists complained after a network of international media outlets, including the Zoddeutsche Zeitung newspaper in cooperation with Amnesty International, as part of a project called Pegasus, that their cell phones were targeted by the Zionist spy software.

The French cyber security agency has officially confirmed Amnesty International’s analysis.

In this way, the pressure on the Zionist company that made this spy software (NEO) and the officials of this regime will increase.

About a week ago, Amnesty International called for a halt to cyber-surveillance activities until a legal framework for the use of this new technology can be established.

The purpose of this request is to establish a legal framework for controlling the use of cyber surveillance technologies, which, according to Amnesty International, poses a serious threat to the privacy and rights of citizens around the world.

The human rights group, which has been heavily involved in the extensive investigation of a media consortium exposing the nature of Pegasus spyware, has also called for stronger rules and regulations in cyber surveillance.

The Amnesty International statement stressed that the revelations about the Pegasus spyware revealed the “crisis of human rights abuses worldwide”.

The statement also called for the suspension of sales and use of cyber-surveillance technologies until a legal oversight framework is in place.

The statement went on to warn of the “destructive effects of unauthorized cyber-monitoring on human rights around the world.”

Amnesty International Secretary-General Nyis Kalamar stressed in the statement: Recent revelations about the operation of the Pegasus spyware malware clearly reveal the potential dangers and harms that people are exposed to after being illegally targeted.

Amnesty International has named the Zionist company, the designer and maker of the Pegasus spyware called “Enaso”, as just one of the actors in this field; this is an area that, according to this human rights organization, is considered very dangerous due to its long-term activity and away from legal supervision.

Amnesty International also states in its statement: “If world leaders are targeted in this way (malware and cyber surveillance), it means that the rights of everyone, especially human rights activists, journalists, lawyers and jurists, are increasingly threatened.”

By accessing smartphones, the Pegasus malware allows hackers to access messages, photos, contacts and eavesdropping, and can even remotely activate smartphone microphones.

According to French media, the mobile phone numbers of President Emmanuel Macron and a number of government ministers are on the list of potential targets of the Pegasus spyware.

A group of 17 international media outlets on Sunday exposed the use of Pegasus malware to spy on journalists and activists.

The revelation was reported by 17 international media outlets, including Le Monde, The Guardian and The Washington Post. The telephone numbers of 180 journalists, 600 political figures, 85 human rights defenders and 65 business executives were on the list of potential targets for the Pegasus malware.

The Paris Federal Attorney General’s Office has also launched an investigation into the software. In Spain, a reporter has been sued for spying on the software.

Reporters without Borders have also reported complaints about the malware in other countries. According to Zooddeutsche Zeitung, the project is also indirectly related to the leaders of the previous Israeli regime. Because the permission to export this spy software was finally issued by an institution under the Ministry of War of this regime.

Meanwhile, the French government has remained silent on the case, which alleges spying on Macron and 15 other ministers.

“The French government has taken a defensive and cautious policy against Israel and Morocco in this case,” one French minister was quoted as saying: “This is annoying; these are two friendly governments that we are working with to fight terrorism.”

Zuddeutsche wrote in the continuation of this report: The US government, which is in any case the closest ally of the Zionist regime, has recently expressed doubts about the operation of this spy software. Several members of Congress have previously called for an investigation and sanctions against it.

In Germany, too, the Federal Bureau of Information Technology has merely warned institutions and companies about the potential threat posed by Pegasus. The German federal government has refused to provide information on which entities may or may not be using the software.

The German federal government has responded to a request from the Green Party: This is a matter of sensitive secret interests that cannot be addressed even under high security conditions.

Asked by the German government about this, Konstantin von Notz, a member of the Green Party, called the government’s refusal to respond to this question a strange and unacceptable act by parliament.

He stressed that for political reasons, the German government is trying to hide extensive cooperation between government agencies and suspected private security companies.

The German parliamentarian stressed that the German parliament’s internal parliamentary commission and parliamentary oversight body should now look into the matter.

Related Articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest Articles