Israel's Cognyte won tender to sell intercept spyware to Myanmar before
coup -documents
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[January 16, 2023]
By Fanny Potkin and Poppy McPherson
SINGAPORE (Reuters) -Israel's Cognyte Software Ltd won a tender to sell
intercept spyware to a Myanmar state-backed telecommunications firm a
month before the Asian nation's February 2021 military coup, according
to documents reviewed by Reuters.
The deal was made even though Israel has claimed it stopped defence
technology transfers to Myanmar following a 2017 ruling by Israel's
Supreme Court, according to a legal complaint recently filed with
Israel's attorney general and disclosed on Sunday.
While the ruling was subjected to a rare gag order at the request of the
state and media cannot cite the verdict, Israel's government has
publicly stated on numerous occasions that defence exports to Myanmar
are banned.
The complaint, led by high-profile Israeli human rights lawyer Eitay
Mack who spearheaded the campaign for the Supreme Court ruling, calls
for a criminal investigation into the deal. It accuses Cognyte and
unnamed defence and foreign ministry officials who supervise such deals
of "aiding and abetting crimes against humanity in Myanmar."
The complaint was filed on behalf of more than 60 Israelis, including a
former speaker of the house as well as prominent activists, academics
and writers.
The documents about the deal, provided to Reuters and Mack by activist
group Justice for Myanmar, are a January 2021 letter with attachments
from Myanmar Posts and Telecommunications (MPT) to local regulators that
list Cognyte as the winning vendor for intercept technology and note the
purchase order was issued "by 30th Dec 2020".
Intercept spyware can give authorities the power to listen in on calls,
view text messages and web traffic including emails, and track the
locations of users without the assistance of telecom and internet firms.
Representatives for Cognyte, Myanmar’s military government and MPT did
not respond to multiple Reuters requests for comment. Japan's KDDI Corp
and Sumitomo Corp, which have stakes in MPT, declined to comment, saying
they were not privy to details on communication interception.
Israel's attorney general did not respond to requests for comment about
the complaint. The foreign affairs ministry did not respond to requests
for comment about the deal, while the defence ministry declined to
comment.
Two people with knowledge of Myanmar’s intercept plans separately told
Reuters the Cognyte system was tested by MPT. They declined to be
identified for fear of retribution by Myanmar's junta.
MPT uses intercept spyware, a source with direct knowledge of the matter
and three people briefed on the issue told Reuters although they did not
identify the vendor. Reuters was unable to determine whether the sale of
Cognyte intercept technology to MPT was finalised.
Even before the coup, public concern had mounted in Israel about the
country's defence exports to Myanmar after a brutal 2017 crackdown by
the military on the country's Rohingya population while Aung San Suu
Kyi's government was in power. The crackdown prompted the petition led
by Mack that asked the Supreme Court to ban arms exports to Myanmar.
Since the coup, the junta has killed thousands of people including many
political opponents, according to the United Nations.
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A sign of the Israeli company Cognyte,
is seen on their headquarters building in Herzliya near Tel Aviv,
Israel January 13, 2023. REUTERS/Nir Elias
COGNYTE UNDER FIRE
Many governments around the world allow for what are commonly called
‘lawful intercepts’ to be used by law enforcement agencies to catch
criminals but the technology is not ordinarily employed without any
kind of legal process, cybersecurity experts have said.
According to industry executives and activists previously
interviewed by Reuters, Myanmar's junta is using invasive telecoms
spyware without legal safeguards to protect human rights.
Mack said Cognyte's participation in the tender contradicts
statements made by Israeli officials after the Supreme court ruling
that no security exports had been made to Myanmar.
While intercept spyware is typically described as "dual-use"
technology for civilian and defence purposes, Israeli law states
that "dual-use" technology is classified as defence equipment.
Israeli law also requires companies exporting defence-related
products to seek licenses for export and marketing when doing deals.
The legal complaint said any officials who granted Cognyte licenses
for Myanmar deals should be investigated. Reuters was unable to
determine whether Cognyte obtained such licenses.
Around the time of the 2020 deal, the political situation in Myanmar
was tense with the military disputing the results of an election won
by Suu Kyi.
Norway's Telenor, previously one of the biggest telecoms firms in
Myanmar before withdrawing from the country last year, also said in
a Dec. 3, 2020 briefing and statement that it was concerned about
Myanmar authorities’ plans for a lawful intercept due to
insufficient legal safeguards.
Nasdaq-listed Cognyte was spun off in February 2021 from Verint
Systems Inc, a pioneering giant in Israel's cybersecurity industry.
Cognyte, which had $474 million in annual revenue for its last
financial year, was also banned from Facebook in 2021. Facebook
owner Meta Platforms Inc said in a report Cognyte "enables managing
fake accounts across social media platforms".
Meta said its investigation identified Cognyte customers in a range
of countries such as Kenya, Mexico and Indonesia and their targets
included journalists and politicians. It did not identify the
customers or the targets.
Meta did not respond to a request for further comment.
Norway’s sovereign wealth fund last month dropped Cognyte from its
portfolio, saying states said to be customers of its surveillance
products and services "have been accused of extremely serious human
rights violations". The fund did not name any states.
Cognyte has not responded publicly to the claims made by Meta or
Norway's sovereign wealth fund.
(Reporting by Fanny Potkin in Singapore & Poppy McPherson in
Bangkok; Additional reporting by Kiyoshi Takenaka in Tokyo and Dan
Williams in Tel Aviv; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
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