HomeAmericaResearchers say EU lawmaker who investigated surveillance was hacked by Israeli spyware

Researchers say EU lawmaker who investigated surveillance was hacked by Israeli spyware

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By Raphael Satter

July 3 (Reuters) - A former member ‌of the European Parliament who served on a committee investigating abusive surveillance was himself hacked using ​an Israeli-made spy tool, a Canadian tech watchdog group said on Friday.

Citizen Lab said in a report that the phone of Stelios Kouloglou, a Greek television journalist-turned-lawmaker, was ⁠hacked at least three times between October 2022 and March 2023 using Pegasus spyware, a tool distributed by the Israeli company NSO Group.

At the time of the targeting, Kouloglou was serving on the European Parliament's PEGA Committee, which was set up in 2022 to examine ​the use of illegal phone hacking across the European Union. The committee focused mainly on the use of Pegasus and similar tools, finding that governments across the EU likely ‌used spyware, "in one way or another, some legitimate, some illegitimate."

Kouloglou said he was astonished at the audacity of whoever was behind the hacking.

"I was not expecting that a PEGA member would be spied on by Pegasus," he told Reuters. "I was not expecting that they would be as ⁠reckless as that."

NSO did not return messages seeking comment.

In a statement to Reuters, the European Parliament did not directly ⁠address Kouloglou's case but said its IT security services "constantly monitor cybersecurity threats as well as potential cyberattacks against its working environment."

It said spyware screening tools had been available to all lawmakers since 2022 and that a report adopted last month called for their extension to all devices used for parliamentary business.

The European Commission, the European Union's executive branch, did not immediately return messages seeking comment.

NSO has said its spy ‌tools are used to police serious crime and to protect national security, but the company has repeatedly been accused of facilitating intrusive surveillance ⁠of journalists, political opponents, civil rights activists and religious figures around the world.

NSO was blacklisted by ‌the U.S. government in 2021 over human rights and national security concerns. Last year, ​WhatsApp owner Meta Platforms won a $168 million damages award against NSO for unlawfully hacking the platform, although the award was significantly reduced. Last month, Meta accused NSO of violating the court's injunction on targeting its services and filed for a contempt order.

Citizen Lab said it ‌believed that Kouloglou had been hacked through a vulnerability in Apple software that was not known ​at the time. It said Kouloglou received repeated warnings ⁠about state-sponsored hacking attempts from Apple in 2023 and 2024.

Citizen Lab did not identify who actually used Pegasus ‌to target the former lawmaker, but it linked some of the hacking ⁠activity to earlier discoveries that Pegasus was used to spy on Russian- and Belarusian-speaking journalists and activists in exile.

Apple did not directly address questions about Kouloglu, but said the vulnerability referred to in the Citizen Lab report had since been patched and that it regularly issued alerts ​to hacking targets. 

Sophie in 't Veld, a former ‌EU lawmaker who championed the PEGA committee's creation, said the hacking of Kouloglou's phone showed how the spread of mercenary spyware had created a surveillance ⁠free-for-all.

"We're in a situation where anybody could spy on anyone and ​they're spying on citizens, they're spying on journalists, they're spying on NGOs, on lawyers, on politicians, and nobody knows who's behind ​it," she said.

(Reporting by Raphael Satter; Editing by Edmund Klamann)

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