The phones of at least five French ministers and a diplomat attached to the Elysee Palace have been infected with Pegasus spyware, according to Mediapart, information confirmed on Friday by two sources familiar with the matter.

The phones were infected in 2019 and 2020 and showed markers of infection with spyware marketed by Israeli company NSO, during their review by French security services, according to Mediapart.

Five ministers and a diplomat concerned

The ministers concerned are Jean-Michel Blanquer (Education), Jacqueline Gourault (territorial cohesion, dependent on the Ministry of the Interior), Julien Denormandie (Agriculture since July 2020, Town and Housing previously), Emmanuelle Wargon (Housing, ecological transition previously ), Sébastien Lecornu (Overseas).

A diplomat from the diplomatic cell of the Elysee Palace, working with President Emmanuel Macron on international issues, is also concerned.

No official source requested by AFP has commented on this information.

But two sources close to the case who requested anonymity confirmed the veracity of this information.

Minister declares having changed phone

"My phone was one of those that were looked at by the National Agency for the Security of Information Systems, I have not yet returned from the investigation so I can not confirm anything at this stage", commented on the site of the newspaper

L'Opinion

Emmanuelle Wargon, who said she changed phone.

"The minister is not a custodian of state secrets so we do not see the usefulness of having listened to her," her cabinet also told AFP.

An investigation at the origin of the revelations

An investigation published from July 18 by a consortium of 17 international media revealed that the Pegasus software, designed by the Israeli company NSO Group, could have spied on the numbers of at least 180 journalists, 600 politicians and politicians. , 85 human rights activists or 65 business leaders from different countries.

This journalistic work is based on a list of 50,000 phone numbers selected by NSO clients since 2016, obtained by the organization Forbidden Stories and Amnesty International.

Several complaints have been filed in France by people claiming to be victims of the software.

Morocco was notably accused of having used the software, which Rabat denied, speaking of “false and unfounded allegations” and initiating several legal proceedings in France, Spain and Germany.

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  • Pegasus Project

  • Cybersecurity

  • Julien Denormandie

  • Jean-Michel Blanquer