Saudi rejects link to hack of Amazon owner Bezos

Monitoring Desk

WASHINGTON: The Saudi embassy in Washington on Tuesday dismissed suggestions the kingdom hacked the phone of Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos, as media reports linked the security breach to a WhatsApp message from an account of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

The 2018 intrusion into the device led to the release of intimate images of Amazon founder Bezos, whose Post newspaper employed as a contributing columnist Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi journalist murdered later that same year at Riyadh´’s consulate in Istanbul.

“Recent media reports that suggest the Kingdom is behind a hacking of Mr Jeff Bezos´ phone are absurd,” the Saudi Arabian embassy said on its Twitter account. “We call for an investigation on these claims so that we can have all the facts out.”

Late Tuesday, The Washington Post reported that a United Nations investigation will report on Wednesday that Bezos´s cell phone was hacked after he got the WhatsApp message from an account purportedly belonging to Prince Mohammed, the kingdom´s de facto ruler.

Soon after the message was sent, a massive amount of data was extracted from Bezos´s phone, the Post said investigators concluded. The two men were having a seemingly friendly WhatsApp exchange when an unsolicited file was sent, according to sources cited by The Guardian.

The Guardian earlier reported that the encrypted message from the number used by Prince Mohammed is believed to have included a malicious file that infiltrated Bezos’s phone, according to a digital forensic analysis.

Bezos hired Gavin de Becker & Associates to find out how his intimate text messages and photos made their way into the hands of the National Enquirer, which reported on the Amazon chief´s extramarital affair, leading to his divorce.

In March last year de Becker said he concluded that Saudi Arabian authorities hacked the Amazon chief’s phone to access his personal data. “Our investigators and several experts concluded with high confidence that the Saudis had access to Bezos’ phone, and gained private information,” de Becker wrote on The Daily Beast website at the time.

But de Becker did not specify which part of the Saudi government he was blaming for the hack, and gave few details about the investigation that led him to the conclusion that the kingdom was responsible.

In December a Saudi court exhonerated Prince Mohammed´s top aides over the murder of Khashoggi, a verdict condemned globally as a travesty of justice but backed by Washington.

Both the CIA and United Nations special envoy Agnes Callamard have directly linked Prince Mohammed to the killing, a charge the kingdom vehemently denies.

Courtesy: (AFP)

The Frontier Post

Recent Posts

Earthquake in Afghanistan kills 812

KABUL (Pajhwok): The death toll from the devastating earthquake in eastern Afghanistan has reached 812,…

9 hours ago

Gandapur says controversial Kalabagh Dam should be built

F.P. Report PESHAWAR: Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur said on Monday that controversial…

9 hours ago

Pakistan offers solidarity after deadly Afghanistan quake

F.P. Report ISLAMABAD: Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar held a telephonic conversation…

9 hours ago

Chief of Staff of Bahrain Defence Force visits Air HQs

F.P. Report ISLAMABAD: Lieutenant General Thiab Saqer Abdulla Al Nuaimi, Chief of Staff, Bahrain Defence…

9 hours ago

UK ‘outraged’ at Israel restricting aid as it works to evacuate children from Gaza for treatment

LONDON (AP) : British officials are working to get critically sick and injured children out…

9 hours ago

850,000 Syrian refugees have returned home since Assad’s fall, UN says

DAMASCUS (AP): Since the fall of Bashar Assad’s government in December, some 850,000 Syrian refugees…

10 hours ago

This website uses cookies.