Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Court rejects Amnesty petition to revoke export license of Israeli spyware firm

Amnesty International claimed that NSO Group, whose technology enables the surveillance of smartphones, helped the Moroccan government spy on a human-rights activist critical of Rabat.

Illustrative photo. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.
Illustrative photo. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.

The Tel Aviv District Court ruled on Monday against an Amnesty International petition to cancel the export license of the Israel-based technology company NSO Group, whose spyware, Pegasus, enables the remote surveillance of smartphones.

Amnesty International filed the petition in January, claiming that “NSO Group, the Israeli company marketing its technology in the fight against COVID-19, contributed to a sustained campaign by the government of Morocco to spy on Moroccan journalist Omar Radi,” a human-rights activist critical of the powers-that-be in Rabat.

The court explained its ruling in favor of NSO on the grounds that the granting of export licenses in Israel “is done after the most rigorous process.”

It also noted that even after an export license is granted to a company, it is subjected to oversight and inspection.

Walid Muhammad Dib was responsible for transferring funds to Palestinian terrorists in Judea and Samaria, Lebanon and “additional countries.”
The IDF also will speed up the destruction of southern Lebanese homes exploited by the terror group.
“If necessary, we will strike with even greater force,” said Israel’s defense minister.
Fragments from intercepted projectiles hit across the metropolis as rescue crews and police secured impact sites.
Fighter jets hit multiple military targets in Tehran and across the country to weaken the regime’s ability to produce and launch ballistic missiles.
“The Iranian terrorist regime poses a global threat. Now, with missiles that can reach London, Paris or Berlin,” the military said.