Pegasus Spyware Used to Hack Phones of Salvadoran Journalists Investigating Alleged State Corruption: Report

Citizen Lab said it found evidence of incursions on the phones that occurred between July 2020 and November 2021.

Advertisement
By Reuters | Updated: 13 January 2022 11:41 IST
Highlights
  • Citizen Lab released a report on its findings on Wednesday
  • Pegasus allows users to steal encrypted messages, photos, and more
  • Citizen Lab researchers began forensic analysis of the El Salvador phones

The alleged hacks were discovered late last year by The Citizen Lab

The cell phones of nearly three dozen journalists and activists in El Salvador, several of whom were investigating alleged state corruption, have been hacked since mid-2020 and implanted with sophisticated spyware typically available only to governments and law enforcement, a Canadian research institute said it has found.

The alleged hacks, which came amid an increasingly hostile environment in El Salvador for media and rights organisations under populist President Nayib Bukele, were discovered late last year by The Citizen Lab, which studies spyware at the University of Toronto's Munk School of Global Affairs. Human-rights group Amnesty International, which collaborated with Citizen Lab on the investigation, says it later confirmed a sample of Citizen Lab's findings through its own technology arm.

Citizen Lab said it found evidence of incursions on the phones that occurred between July 2020 and November 2021. It said it could not identify who was responsible for deploying the Israeli-designed spyware. Known as Pegasus, the software has been purchased by state actors worldwide, some of whom have used the tool to surveil journalists.

Advertisement

In the El Salvador attack, the heavy focus on editors, reporters, and activists working inside that single Central American country points to a local customer with a particular interest in their activities, said Scott-Railton, a senior researcher at Citizen Lab.

Advertisement

"I can't think of a case where near-exclusive Pegasus targeting in one country didn't wind up being a user in that country," Scott-Railton said.

Citizen Lab released a report on its findings on Wednesday.

Advertisement

In a statement to Reuters, Bukele's communications office said the government of El Salvador was not a client of NSO Group Technologies, the company that developed Pegasus. It said the administration is investigating the alleged hacking and had information that some top administration officials also might have had their phones infiltrated.

"We have indications that we, government officials, are also victims of attacks," the statement said.

Advertisement

Pegasus allows users to steal encrypted messages, photos, contacts, documents, and other sensitive information from infected phones without users' knowledge. It can also turn handsets into eavesdropping devices by silently activating their cameras and microphones, according to product manuals reviewed by Reuters.

NSO, which has long kept its client list confidential, declined to comment on whether El Salvador was a Pegasus customer. The company said in a statement that it sells its products only to "vetted and legitimate" intelligence and law enforcement agencies to fight crime and that it is not involved in surveillance operations. NSO said it has a "zero-tolerance" policy for misuse of its spyware for activities such as monitoring dissidents, activists and journalists and that it has terminated contracts of some customers who have done so.

Citizen Lab researchers said they began a forensic analysis of the El Salvador phones in September after being contacted by two journalists there who suspected their devices might be compromised.

Researchers said they ultimately found evidence that spyware had been planted on a total of 37 devices belonging to three human-rights groups, six news publications and an independent journalist.

Hardest hit was the online news site El Faro. Citizen Lab researchers said they found telltale tracks of spyware infections on the cell phones of 22 reporters, editors and administrative personnel - more than two-thirds of the company's staff - and evidence that data had been stolen from many of those devices, including a few that had several gigabytes of material extracted.

El Faro was under constant surveillance during at least 17 months, between June 29, 2020 and November 23, 2021, with the phone of Editor-in-Chief Oscar Martinez infiltrated at least 42 times, Citizen Lab claimed.

"It is hard for me to think or conclude something other than the government of El Salvador" was behind the alleged hacks, Martinez said. "It's evident that there is a radical interest in understanding what El Faro is doing."

During the time of the purported infiltrations with Pegasus, El Faro reported extensively on scandals involving Bukele's government, including allegations that he was negotiating a financial deal with El Salvador's violent street gangs to reduce the homicide rate to boost popular support for the president's New Ideas party.

Bukele, who spars frequently with the press, publicly condemned El Faro's reporting on those purported talks as "ridiculous" and "false information" in a September 3, 2020 Twitter post.

Phone snooping isn't new to El Salvador, according to Citizen Lab. It alleged in a 2020 report that El Salvador was among at least 25 countries using a bulk surveillance technology made by an Israeli company called Circles. The Circles technology differs from Pegasus in that it vacuums up data from the global phone network instead of planting spyware on specific devices. The report claimed the Circles system had been in operation in El Salvador since 2017.

Circles could not immediately be reached for comment.

Sofia Medina, Bukele's communications secretary, noted that his administration was not in power in 2017 and claimed, without providing evidence, that the alleged Pegasus attacks appeared to be a continuation of surveillance launched by an unknown "powerful group."

Citizen Lab's latest investigation in El Salvador was conducted as a collaboration with digital-rights group Access Now, with investigative assistance from human-rights groups Frontline Defenders, SocialTIC and Fundacion Acceso.


Xiaomi India speaks exclusively to Orbital, the Gadgets 360 podcast, on their plans for 2022 and pushing for 120W fast charging with the 11i HyperCharge. Orbital is available on Spotify, Gaana, JioSaavn, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music and wherever you get your podcasts.
Affiliate links may be automatically generated - see our ethics statement for details.
 

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

Further reading: Citizen Lab, Nayib Bukele, Pegasus, NSO, Spyware
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Butterfly-Shaped Hole in the Sun Could Spark Solar Storms Worldwide
  2. The Madras Mystery OTT Release: Know All About This Nazriya Nazim Thriller
  1. Butterfly-Shaped Hole in the Sun Could Spark Solar Storms Worldwide This Weekend
  2. Before Watching Demon Slayer: Infinity Castle, Here’s Where to Catch Up on the First 4 Seasons
  3. Two Men OTT Release: All You Need to Know About the Malayalam-Language Thriller Starring Irshad Ali
  4. Black Rabbit OTT Release: When and Where to Watch the Jason Bateman, Jude Law Crime Thriller
  5. Busy Weekend for ISS as Progress 93 Docks and Cygnus XL Prepares for Launch
  6. NASA’s X-59 Quiet Supersonic Jet Prepares for First Flight, to Fly Without the Sonic Boom
  7. The Bad Guys 2 OTT Release: Know All About This Animated Comedy Movie
  8. The Rip OTT Release: When and Where to Watch the Matt Damon, Ben Affleck Thriller
  9. Kurukshetra: The Great War of Mahabharata Animated Series Is Coming to This OTT Platform Very Soon
  10. Astronomers Predict 90 Percent Chance of Spotting an Exploding Black Hole in Next Decade
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.