Phone numbers of Indian ministers, opposition leaders and journalists have been found on a leaked database of targets for hacking that used Israeli spyware ‘Pegasus’, media reports said.
Members of the legal community, businessmen, government officials, scientists, rights activists and others are also in the list of over 300 verified Indian mobile telephone numbers, the reports said.
According to one news website, analysis of the data shows that most of the names were targeted between 2018 and 2019, in the run-up to the 2019 Lok Sabha general elections.
The Israeli company, NSO Group, which sells Pegasus, has claimed that it only offers its spyware to “vetted governments”.
However, the Indian government has denied involvement in the hacking, saying, “The allegations regarding government surveillance on specific people has no concrete basis or truth associated with it whatsoever.”
“We have nothing to fear and the government has nothing to hide. We will reply to any query. The news article proves nothing. In fact, previous attempts to link Pegasus with the government have failed,” a source in the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) said.
NSO Group in its “Transparency and Responsibility Report 2021” says its products are “designed for the sole use of thoroughly vetted and approved governmental agencies charged with maintaining public safety and security.” It says, “…We license Pegasus only to select approved, verified and authorised states and state agencies, specifically to be used in national security and major law enforcement-driven investigations.”
A response by MeitY to a media questionnaire said that in the past, similar claims were made regarding the use of the software by the Indian government. “Those reports also had no factual basis and were categorically denied by all parties, including WhatsApp in the Supreme Court. This news report, thus, also appears to be a similar fishing expedition, based on conjectures and exaggerations to malign the Indian democracy and its institutions,” the government said in the statement.
MeitY in the statement said India is a robust democracy committed to ensuring right to privacy as a fundamental right. “However, the questionnaire sent to the government indicates that the story being crafted is one that is not only bereft of facts but also founded in pre-conceived conclusions. It seems you are trying to play the role of an investigator, prosecutor as well as jury,” the statement added.
The ministry also detailed the procedure through which “lawful interception of electronic communication is carried out in order for the purpose of national security…”
“The requests for these lawful interception of electronic communication are made as per relevant rules under the provisions of section 5(2) of Indian Telegraph Act ,1885 and section 69 of the Information Technology (Amendment) Act, 2000. Each case of interception, monitoring, and decryption is approved by the competent authority i.e. the Union Home Secretary,” it said, adding that these powers are also available to the competent authority in the state governments. “There is an established oversight mechanism in the form of a review committee headed by the Union Cabinet Secretary,” it said.
In late 2019, WhatsApp filed a lawsuit in a US court, accusing Israeli surveillance firm NSO of helping government spies break into the phones of about 1,400 users across four continents.
Following reports that journalists and activists in India were also targeted, then Information Technology Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad told the Rajya Sabha that “no unauthorised intervention” took place.
With inputs from NDTV