Italy denies it spied on journalists and migrant activists using Israeli-made Paragon spyware

The Italian government denies that it had spied on journalists and migrant activists using spyware but said it would cooperate with an investigation into “vulnerabilities” after at least seven Italian cell phones were apparently hacked with military-grade surveillance technology.

Meta’s WhatsApp messaging service informed dozens of people across the European Union on Jan. 31 that they had been targeted in a spyware attack using technology from Israeli cyber firm Paragon Solutions.

In a statement provided by Meta’s Italy press office, WhatsApp said it had disrupted what it called “a spyware campaign by Paragon that targeted several users, including journalists and members of civil society.”

After The Guardian newspaper broke the story, the Italian government confirmed on Feb. 5 that at least seven Italian cell phones were involved and that it had activated the National Cybersecurity Agency, which reports to the premier’s office, to investigate.

It said other targeted phones had numbers from Belgium, Greece, Latvia, Lithuania, Austria, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Germany, Netherlands, Portugal, Spain and Sweden.

Speaking to parliament’s lower chamber today, Cabinet Minister Luca Ciriani confirms that the Italian government, for many years, has had a contract with Paragon Solutions to provide intelligence-gathering capabilities to fight terrorism and other threats to national security.

But he insists that the law was “rigorously respected” and denied the government had used the technology to spy on journalists illegally. He threatens legal action against any claims to the contrary.

“Regardless, it’s up to judicial authorities to ascertain the source of the vulnerabilities that have been claimed,” he said, adding that Italian intelligence services “are ready to provide full support.”

Most Popular