The people of the Hungarian capital, Budapest, protested and demanded the resignation of the right-wing government of the country due to the use of spy tools made by the Zionist regime.
At least 1,000 Hungarians have staged a demonstration in the capital, Budapest, demanding that the government respond to allegations that it used Pegasus spy software to secretly monitor journalists, lawyers and others, the Associated Press reported.
The protests began in front of a building that was formerly the headquarters of the Soviet-era secret police. The protests came after global polls by a consortium of various media outlets showed that smartphones had targeted about 300 Pegasus spies, including 10 lawyers and five journalists. are.
“This scandal shows that we can no longer talk about the rule of law in Hungary,” said Anna Denath, a Hungarian lawmaker in the EU legislature who also took part in the protests. We want the government to resign.
Hungarian authorities have so far refused to confirm or deny that the government has used the spyware since the report was released, but insist that all their covert surveillance activities have been carried out in accordance with Hungarian law.
According to the Mehr news agency, the representatives of the Hungarian government opposition in the Hungarian parliament have already demanded the investigation of documents proving that the Hungarian government has used a malware created by the Zionist regime to spy on journalists, politicians and business critics.
The investigation, conducted by a consortium of international media outlets, shows that Hungary’s far-right government has long used Zionist NSO’s Pegasus malware to spy on critics of the government, including 10 members of parliament and an opposition politician. The government has used at least five critical journalists.
The release of the report prompted three members of the Hungarian parliament’s National Security Committee to request an urgent meeting with state security agencies to investigate their possible involvement in the use of the Israeli spyware.
Earlier, 17 different media outlets investigated the role of spyware developed by an Israeli company in a series of successful and unsuccessful hacking attacks on at least 37 smartphones owned by government officials and journalists, or by human rights activists. ; It was later revealed that the list included 50,000 mobile phone numbers that may have been targeted by the spyware.
According to the Washington Post, one of the media outlets involved in the study; Pegasus spy software, made by NSO based in the Occupied Territories, against the cell phones of two women who were close relatives of the slain Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
The Guardian also writes that the hacking attack using the Zionist company’s spy software is widespread and is still going on.