MPs Demand End of UK Gov’t Program over Israeli Pegasus Spyware Scandal


MPs Demand End of UK Gov’t Program over Israeli Pegasus Spyware Scandal

TEHRAN (Tasnim) – Members of parliament in Britain urged Prime Minister Boris Johnson to scrap a taxpayer-funded multimillion pound program for Persian Gulf’s Arab states, following their involvement in the Israeli Pegasus spyware scandal earlier this year.

The Pegasus spyware, developed by the Israeli NSO Group, was made infamous in July when the University of Toronto's internet watchdog Citizen Lab exposed numerous governments' misuse of the software through the hacking of around 50,000 phones and devices belonging to journalists, human rights activists, and political critics worldwide.

Amongst those client governments were Persian Gulf Arab states, including the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Saudi Arabia, and Bahrain.

British MPs – led by the Liberal Democrat Foreign Affairs and International Development spokesperson Layla Moran – have now called on the UK to scrap the (Persian) Gulf Strategy Fund, a program run by the British government which supports the six Persian Gulf Arab states and is part of the UK's foreign policy towards them.

In a letter written and signed by the MPs, they told Johnson that the hackings supported and ordered by the Persian Gulf Arab states "appear to show a blatant disregard by these GCC states for both UK and international law."

They also questioned the program's contribution to the UK's national security, saying that "The continued supply of surveillance equipment and services, as well as of advanced military and technical training and equipment to Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain, may in fact pose a serious threat to our national security."

After the confidential program was reported on at the beginning of this year, when it was revealed that the UK provided the Saudi military with £2.4 million, the Conservative MP James Cleverly insisted that the (Persian) Gulf Strategy Fund helps Riyadh to "protect its national security" and overall has a "significant positive impact on human rights in the region."

Through the program, the UK has already provided up to £53.4 million to the six Persian Gulf states it is allied with. Apart from issues such as those states' poor human rights records and the ongoing war on Yemen already having been a point of criticism, the scandal around the Pegasus spyware proves to be another obstacle to the program's legitimacy amongst some MPs, according to the Middle East Monitor.

The MPs told Johnson that the "government has failed to publicly condemn the actions of either NSO Group or the Saudi, Emirati and Bahraini governments or take substantive action to protect UK nationals and residents."

They also demanded that the UK blacklist and impose restrictions and sanctions on the NSO Group, which the United States did last week. Like Washington, London must "ensure there is much tighter supervision on the licensing of relevant software in compliance with international human rights law," the MPs stressed.

Contrary to the calls to oppose the Israeli spyware firm, it was reported early in 2020 that the UK government was helping it to sell its products and software.

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