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NSO ends UAE spyware contract after Dubai ruler hacks ex-wife's phone

Hacking took place last year during couple's ongoing multi-million dollar custody battle. NSO Group says it shut down six systems with contracts worth over $300 million.

by  Reuters and ILH Staff
Published on  10-07-2021 15:08
Last modified: 10-07-2021 15:08
NSO ends UAE spyware contract after Dubai ruler hacks ex-wife's phoneAP / Amr Nabil

Prime Minister of the United Arab Emirates Sheikh Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum attends the 40th Gulf Cooperation Council Summit in Riyadh, Dec. 10, 2019 | File photo: AP / Amr Nabil

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The Israel-based NSO Group has ended its contract with the United Arab Emirates to use its powerful Pegasus state spyware tool because Dubai's ruler was using it to hack the phones of his ex-wife and some close to her, her lawyers told England's High Court.

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Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, vice president and prime minister of the UAE, ordered the hacking of six phones belonging to Princess Haya bint al-Hussein, her lawyers, and her security team, England's High Court ruled in a judgment made public Wednesday.

The hacking took place last year during the couple's ongoing multi-million dollar custody battle in London over their two children.

During the hearings, the court heard that NSO had canceled its contract with the UAE for breaching its rules on using Pegasus, a sophisticated "wiretap" system used to harvest data from the mobile devices of specific suspected major criminals or terrorists.

"Whenever a suspicion of a misuse arises, NSO investigates, NSO alerts, NSO terminates," the firm, which only licenses its software to government intelligence and law enforcement agencies, said in a statement after the rulings were published.

It said it had shut down six systems of past customers with contracts worth more than $300 million. NSO did not go into specifics.

The sheikh rejected the court's conclusions, saying they were based on an incomplete picture.

"I have always denied the allegations made against me, and I continue to do so," he said in a statement.

The hacking of Haya and those connected to her, including her lawyer Fiona Shackleton, a lawmaker in Britain's House of Lords, came to light at the start of August last year.

A cyber expert studying the possible use of Pegasus against a UAE activist realized the phones had been hacked and passed on the information, according to documents and evidence presented to the court.

At the same time, a whistleblower alerted NSO that the software was being misused to target Haya and her legal team, a source familiar with the company told Reuters.

It immediately informed Cherie Blair, a high-profile British lawyer hired by NSO to work as an external adviser on human rights, to warn the princess.

Within two hours, the company shut down the customer's system and prevented any other client from being able to use Pegasus to target British numbers, a measure still in place today, the source said.

Blair, wife of former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, said in a statement to the court: "During a conversation with the NSO senior manager, I recall asking him whether their client was the big state or the little state, the manager clarified it was the little state, which I took to be the state of Dubai."

She told Shackleton that NSO had immediately stopped that country from using Pegasus and had demanded answers.

"Cherie Blair said if they weren't using the software to find genuine terrorists, they had a problem," Haya's lawyer Charles Geekie told the court. "Her client did not want to be connected to this type of behavior and wanted to help."

In a letter to the court on Dec. 14 last year, NSO said it had canceled its contract with its client, who the company declined to identify.

"As the NSO letter of December 2020 makes plain, after its investigation NSO has adopted the extreme remedy of terminating its customer's use of the Pegasus software," Judge Andrew McFarlane, President of the Family Division in England and Wales, said in his ruling.

"In commercial terms, this step is to be understood as having great significance."

In recent months, NSO's Pegasus has become the focus of international attention following several reports that the spyware was being used by governments to illicitly target human rights campaigners, journalists and politicians.

In October 2019, WhatsApp sued NSO, accusing it of helping government spies break into the phones of roughly 1,400 users across four continents with targets including diplomats, political dissidents and senior government officials.

The firm had about 45 countries as customers, but had refused to do business with 90 others because they couldn't trust them over human rights issues, the source said.

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Tags: EnglandNSO GroupPegasusSheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-MaktoumUAE

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