French Finance Minister’s phone has been investigated due to the possibility of contamination with “Pegasus”.
Bruno Lumière said the French government was investigating Pegasus’s spyware, which included his cell phone.
The cell phone of French Finance Minister Bruno Lumière has been examined to determine whether it is infected with a Zionist spyware called Pegasus.
“We are in the investigation phase and this includes my personal apparatus,” the French politician said today (Friday), according to Reuters. He declined to comment further.
According to investigations by 17 media outlets, the Pegasus spyware, a product of the Zionist group UNO, has been used to hack smartphones belonging to journalists, government officials and human rights activists around the world.
He changed his cell phone and number after speculating that French President Emmanuel Macron may have been one of the spyware’s 50,000 targets.
The French president also called on the Israeli prime minister to take the issue of Pegasus spyware seriously. Following Macron’s sharp criticism of the issue, the Tel Aviv Department of War announced an investigation.
Israeli War Minister Benny Gantz said during a meeting with French Defense Minister Florence Parley on Wednesday evening that reports of spyware produced by an Israeli company were being taken very seriously.
A spokesman for the French government said during a meeting between the defense minister and the Israeli war minister that Parley had taken the opportunity to ask Gantz what information the Tel Aviv cabinet had about the UNSC activities.
Various media outlets, including the Washington Post, Le Monde, the Guardian, and several other sources, recently revealed that the Zionist spyware had been sold to some countries, including Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, to hack into the personal information of several personalities worldwide.
The Washington Post, one of the media outlets involved in the study, reported that Pegasus spyware was licensed by the UN-based Palestinian Authority to target cell phones belonging to two women close to Jamal Khashoggi, a former columnist for the newspaper. The man who was assassinated by Saudi agents at the Riyadh consulate in Istanbul, and the fate of his body is still unknown.