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Saudi agents install secret phone spyware to track critics abroad: Citizen Lab

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saudi spying monitoring
A
Saudi-linked agent has been found installing spyware on
smartphones belonging to the kingdom’s critics. Here, Saudi
soldiers monitor screens during the annual Hajj pilgrimage in the
country.

AHMAD GHARABLI/AFP/Getty
Images


  • Saudi agents are reportedly installing spyware on
    people’s smartphones to crack down on critics living
    abroad.
  • At least one Saudi critic was targeted by Israeli
    cyberintelligence firm NSO Group’s Pegasus spyware software,
    which enables hackers to access messages, photos, microphone,
    and camera, researchers at Toronto’s Citizen Lab reported this
    week.
  • That critic was identified as outspoken Saudi critic
    and personality Omar Abdulaziz.

Saudi agents are reportedly secretly installing spyware on
people’s smartphones to crack down on critics living abroad.

At least one critic of the kingdom had his smartphone targeted by
Israeli cyberintelligence firm NSO Group’s Pegasus spyware
software, which enables hackers to gain access to messages,
photos, emails, microphone, and camera,
according to a new report from Citizen Lab
, a Toronto
information and technology lab.

The report’s authors assessed with “high confidence” that
outspoken Saudi critic and YouTuber
Omar Abdulaziz
was targeted with the spyware in June.

Abdulaziz’s device got infected after he clicked on a link
purportedly sent from the courier company DHL, the report said.
He had made a purchase on Amazon earlier and later received a
text message from DHL explaining that a package was due to be
shipped, the report said.

But the message instead linked to a website that, according to
Citizen Lab, had been identified as a known Pegasus exploit
domain, and clicking on the link resulted in the infection of the
software onto his phone.



saudi omar abdulaziz
Prominent
Saudi critic Omar Abdulaziz had his smartphone infected by
spyware, Citizen Lab said.


Screenshot/Youtube




How the lab figured out Abdulaziz was being targeted

Citizen Lab concluded the Abdulaziz was a target because someone
using a consumer and university Internet Service Provider (ISP)
in Quebec, Canada, found an infection by the Saudi-linked agent.

The lab then contacted the Saudi diaspora in Quebec and
determined that Abdulaziz, a student at the city’s Bishop’s
University, best fit the description.

By corroborating his movements and the suspicious DHL message on
his phone, the lab concluded with “high confidence” that he was
likely the target of the malicious attack.

Citizen Lab said they were drawn to investigate Abdulaziz after

publishing research in September
on Pegasus spyware being
used in operations in 45 countries.

The lab found that one Pegasus operator appeared to be acting in
the interest of Saudi Arabia in a series of complex overseas
operations, and actively monitoring targets in countries like
Bahrain, Canada, Egypt, France, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco,
Qatar, Turkey and the UK.

One of the targets earlier this year appeared to be London-based
Saudi dissident and Amnesty International researcher named Yahya
Assiri, the September report said.



university of toronto
The University of Toronto, where Citizen Lab is
based.

Shutterstock



Abdulaziz had no idea he was being spied on until Citizen
Lab reached out

Abdulaziz first moved from Saudi Arabia to Canada as a student,
and became actively involved in political commentary online. He
says he decided to apply for political asylum in 2014 because he
felt that his outspoken criticism of the government posed risks
back home.

According to the 27-year-old, who hosts a popular satirical news
program on YouTube,
the government arrested two of his brothers and several of his
friends back home in Saudi Arabia
in August in response to
his activism.

He said he did not suspect his phone was being monitored until
Citizen Lab reached out to corroborate its hypothesis.

“When they [Citizen Lab] reached out I figured that someone must
have been listening to me and reading the conversations between
me and my friends and my brothers,” he told Business Insider.
“Some of them were arrested, and I’m sure hackers had access to
everything on my phone.”

Abdulaziz also says he began receiving messages from unknown
Twitter and Snapchat accounts in the past month discussing
intimate details about his personal and romantic life, which he
had not discussed publicly.

He says he still uses the same phone, but doesn’t discuss
personal matters with anyone in Saudi Arabia.

“Now I’m okay, but I’m still concerned about the safety and
security of my brothers and friends, many of whom I haven’t heard
from since they disappeared,” he added. “We haven’t received any
news about them and I don’t know if they’re okay.”

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