What's new

Israeli Spy Tech Sold to Bangladesh, World’s Third-largest Muslim Country, Despite Dismal Human Rights Record

Black_cats

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Dec 31, 2010
Messages
10,031
Reaction score
-5
National Security & Cyber

Israeli Spy Tech Sold to Bangladesh, World’s Third-largest Muslim Country, Despite Dismal Human Rights Record​

Advanced cyber tools to intercept mobile and internet traffic were sold to the Interior Ministry, internal security agency and armed forces, via Cyprus. Israel and Bangladesh do not have diplomatic relations

Oded YaronZulkarnain Saer Khan
Jan 10, 2023 6:15 am IST

Police in Dhaka, Bangladesh. "The government has the will and the means to suppress its political opponents"Credit: Syed Mahmudur Rahman / Nur Photo via AFP

Advanced surveillance equipment, developed by a company controlled by the former commander of Israeli intelligence’s technology unit, was sold last year to the government of Bangladesh, official government documents and international export records show, despite Bangladesh not being on Israel's list of countries that such technology may be sold to - and despite its consistently poor human rights record.

The equipment, which is used to intercept mobile and internet traffic, was sold to the National Telecommunication Monitoring Center, or NTMC, an arm of the Bangladeshi Interior Ministry responsible for tracking internet and social media use inside the country, as well as for online censorship and eavesdropping on citizens.

Bangladesh is the third-largest Muslim country in the world, and does not recognize Israel. The two countries have no diplomatic relations, and until 2021, all Bangladeshi passports had “This passport is valid for all countries of the world except Israel” written on them.

Bangladesh is the third-largest Muslim country in the world, and does not recognize Israel. The two countries have no diplomatic relations, and until 2021, all Bangladeshi passports had “This passport is valid for all countries of the world except Israel” written on them.

Passitora, a firm registered in Cyprus, is controlled by Tal Dilian, an Israeli businessman and former intel commander. Under its previous name WiSpear, it was involved in a scandal that began with a boastful interview Dilian gave to Forbes, in which he revealed the existence of the company’s SpearHead system, which includes a van equipped with surveillance equipment and tracking software, that gathers data from mobile phones via cellular and Wi-Fi networks, including encrypted WhatsApp messages, Facebook chats, contact lists, calls and text messages within a radius of about half a kilometer. A presentation on WiSpear claims the system can be used to inject spyware on computers and mobile phones within its range.


The Forbes report embarrassed the government in Cyprus, creating political turmoil and leading to an investigation into violations of European Union privacy laws. In the end, all the allegations against Dilian and top company executives were dropped, but WiSpear was fined one million euros (about $1.1 million) for “extracting data unlawfully” from the devices of passersby at the Larnaca Airport.

Export records show that in June 2022, a SpearHead system was delivered from Switzerland to the Bangladeshi capital of Dhaka. The supplier was Passitora, and the buyer was NTMC. The shipment, weighing 991 kilograms, included the interception system, operating software and hardware components (servers, drives, monitors, etc.) at a total cost of $5.7 million.


Passitora is part of the Intellexa Alliance, a network of companies run by Dilian that acquired an array of sophisticated surveillance technologies, including mobile phone hacking spyware, that it sells to government agencies around the world. A Haaretz investigation revealed the network and a plane linked to Dilian, which delivered advanced spying equipment to a notorious militia in Sudan in May 2022.

Sources in Israel’s cyberarms industry say the company’s operations are not overseen by the Israeli government. Amir Eshel, the outgoing Defense Ministry director general, spoke to The New York Times in December about his inability to rein in Dilian and others who set companies abroad. “It certainly disturbs me that a veteran of our intelligence and cyber units, who employs other former senior officials, operates around the world without any oversight,” Eshel said.

The Israeli Defense Ministry did not specifically address Haaretz questions on whether it oversees Passitora and the other firms mentioned in this report, and whether it approved the spyware sales to Bangladesh, and said this in response: “The Defense Ministry acts, and will act, to enforce unapproved defense exports, including services and knowhow - according to its legal authority. As a rule, the ministry does not divulge information on the defense export policy, for security, diplomatic and strategic considerations”.

The government's preferred weapon


Over the last decade, intelligence bodies, the police and armed forces in Bangladesh have developed a huge appetite for advanced monitoring and spy technology, according to the organization Privacy International. Official government documents prohibit accepting bids from Israel, but it appears that in the area of cyberweapons, Bangladesh is ready to make an exception to the rule. Likewise, Israeli companies are formally banned from doing business with Bangladesh, but the exceptions seem to prove there is no longer much substance behind that rule.



In 2021, Haaretz reported that the Israeli company Cellebrite had sold mobile phone hacking tools to a notorious Bangladeshi police unit, the Rapid Action Battalion, whose leaders are subject to U.S. sanctions due to its alleged role in the disappearance of thousands of people, horrific torture and human rights violations. Al-Jazeera revealed that another Israeli company, Picsix, sold Bangladesh’s military intelligence a mobile phone surveillance and hacking system for intercepting phone transmissions.


But official documents cited in this report reveal for the first time four other transactions for the purchase of Israeli spy technology by Bangladeshi government agencies involved in human rights violations. The technology enables them to surveil Bangladeshi citizens through their phone and to hack wireless networks and monitor internet traffic.


The companies are either Israeli or foreign with a clear link to Israel, and some of the exports are by firms registered in the Virgin Islands, Cyprus and Singapore who seemingly act solely as middlemen.


Bangladesh's Rapid Action Battalion. A former commander is now head of communications monitoring

Israeli spyware bought by Bangladesh​

  • Passitora: Mobile phone interception system worth $5.7 million
  • Prelysis: Wi-Fi interception system worth $3 million
  • U-TX Technologies: “Web Intelligence” system and a cellular tracking system worth $2.5 million
  • Coralco Tech: Active mobile phones monitoring system worth $1.6 million
NTMC, the Interior Ministry arm that bought the SpearHead system, was formed in 2013 and deals, according to reports, with eavesdropping on opposition officials, protestors and ordinary citizens. It is the “Bangladeshi government's largest legal interception system … that is connected with about 250 communications providers in the country,” admitted one of its former senior officials. Every provider is required to give NTMC full access to traffic on their networks.


NTMC’s Director General is Maj. Gen. Ziaul Ahsan, who previously held a series of operational and intelligence posts in the Rapid Action Battalion. A former Bangladesh army chief, Aziz Ahmed, claims that Ahsan is personally responsible for many of the disappearances that have occurred in the country.

“Today, there’s no significant political opposition in Bangladesh – the government has the will and the means to suppress its political opponents," says Zulkarnain Saer Khan. A Bangladeshi journalist who now lives in exile, Saer Khan has exposed political oppression in his country and took part in this investigation.

“Bangladesh isn’t capable of providing its citizens with basic infrastructure, but government agencies enjoy the best modern spy technology money can buy. Draconian laws have turned it into the government’s preferred weapon for silencing and intimidating journalists, critics and political activists. Negative propaganda against the father of the nation – the father of the current prime minister – can end in 14 years in prison,” he says.

Two of Khan’s colleagues were persecuted by the authorities after they criticized the government: cartoonist Ahmed Kabir Kishore was detained for 10 months during which he was severely tortured; and the writer-journalist Mushtaq Ahmed who was arrested, tortured and died while in custody. Photographer Shahidul Alam was arrested in a similar manner after he criticized the government on an Al-Jazeera interview. He was also tortured while in detention and released after 100 days.

Training trips to Greece

In June 2021, the Bangladeshi cabinet decided to buy a “Vehicle Mounted Mobile Interceptor” spy vehicle, which is equipped with, among other things, technology to intercept mobile phone calls and text messages, locate the user and hack into wireless networks. According to an official cabinet document, two companies bid to supply the technology, and the one that was chosen was a Swiss company, Toru Group Limited.

There is no company that goes by that name in the Swiss companies registry, but a company that does have that name is registered in the British Virgin Islands. It has a Geneva address that is used by a firm that provides foreign registration services for companies.

According to a very general description on Toru’s website and LinkedIn page, the company is a “world-leading provider of Cyber Security and Defense solutions… your One-Stop-Shop which caters to all your Security & Defense needs.” But there is no indication of what sort of “solutions” the company offers, and a search of patents connected with it revealed nothing.

The company's CEO is Assaf Elias, an Israeli citizen, according to profiles on LinkedIn and Facebook. Until recently, Elias was a minority shareholder in another company registered in Britain, together with several prominent figures in the Israeli cyberoffensive industry.

Toru’s website makes no reference to the sort of spy vehicle that Bangladesh purchased from the company. As far as it is known, none of Elias’ partners in the British company make such a vehicle. The one who does make one is Dilian, owner of Passitora. Sales pitches by another Dilian firm showcased the spy van alongside the SpearHead Wi-Fi interception system, the type which according to export records was shipped to Bangladesh last June. According to three sources, Toru Group, headed by Elias, acted as a middleman for various deals with Dilian’s firms.

Dilian's promotional materials showcase the spy van and SpearHead system shipped to Bangladesh
Official documents from Bangladesh’s Interior Ministry reveal that the commander of the NTMC and other senior officials flew to Greece in 2021 and 2022 to train on the spy vehicle they had bought. According to the documents, the trips “were fully funded by Toru.”

By that time, Dilian had already moved his headquarters to Athens after his entanglements in Cyprus. According to past reports, the office had set aside an area with prayer mats for teams coming for training from Muslim countries like Bangladesh.

NTMC’s budget shows that the system was expected to arrive in Bangladesh in mid-2022. Shipping documents show that the system was delivered at the end of June. Two sources in Bangladesh say that a new, advanced spy van is already in service, with its surveillance tools leading to the firing of seven police officers who allegedly criticized the government on a secret WhatsApp group and communicated with figures in the BNP opposition party.

Passitora and Dilian did not respond to requests for comment. When reached for a response, Elias hung up and declined to comment.

Not just Big Brother on wheels

The cyber shopping spree didn’t end here. An official document from the prime minister's office dating from 2019 shows that Bangladesh’s internal intelligence agency, or NSI, also bought a system for intercepting Wi-Fi communications from a company called Prelysis.

That year, four senior NSI officials went to Cyprus to inspect the system before it was shipped to Bangladesh. Cypriot export records show a July 2019 Wi-Fi interception system shipped from Prelysis to Bangladesh at a total cost of about $3 million.

Prelysis is registered in Israel and Cyprus under slightly different names. The Cypriot firm is “dormant”, while the official document from Bangladesh has the Israeli firm’s name. Its website says it is “a consultancy and integration company in the intelligence and homeland security domain.” It boasts a platform that integrates various intelligence sources, including wireless and cellular communication sensors and device location. The founder of the company and its current director, Israeli citizen Kobi Naveh, worked until 2014 at Verint.


In reply to an “Haaretz” inquiry, into whether Prelysis is overseen by Israel’s Defense Ministry and whether it OK’d the deal, Naveh said he “cannot respond”.

Israel-Singapore-Cyprus-Bangladesh

Sources in Israel’s cyber industry say Bangladesh isn’t on the list of countries that the Israeli defense establishment approves for exports of classified technology, due to concerns that it will fall into the hands of Pakistan. They say that in the past year, the list of countries approved for cyberoffensive exports has been whittled down to just 37, most of them Western democracies. The Defense Ministry consistently refuses to respond or divulge any information on the list of approved countries.

Cyprus' export records from July 2019 show another shipment for the Bangladeshi military – this time for equipment used for the “active monitoring of mobile phones” – at a cost of $1.6 million. The supplier is Coralco Tech, of Singapore. A tender by the Bangladesh Army from 2018 shows that the military was indeed interested in systems for active and passive tracking and locating of mobile phones.

On its now-inactive website and LinkedIn page, the company describes itself as “a global cutting-edge espionage & telecommunications technologies company for private government sectors. Delivering the highest level of professionalism and service in covert operations.” It offers "tactical and strategic" interception of cellular and Wi-Fi communications and tracking of mobile phones.

On Singapore’s companies registrar, Israeli Eyal Almog is listed as Coralco Tech’s owner. In Israel, the company is registered under the same name and address, and with the same owner. Almog's LinkedIn page carries endorsements from his friends in the cybersecurity, defense, intelligence and homeland security communities. Some of them worked with him. One of them, a Bangladeshi national, says that as a local expert he installed various systems to intercept cellular communications and helped connect telecom providers to the NTMC's surveillance system.

In response to this report, Coralco Tech said that “due to the nature of its deals, the company does not comment on the identity of its clients and the products that they buy. In general, all deals involving the company are fully reported while attaining the proper licenses from the regulatory bodies, including Israel’s Defense Ministry. The company sells its products after an internal vetting process that takes into account human rights violations”.

Cyprus export records reveal that another company, U-TX Technologies, provided surveillance equipment to Bangladesh. This includes a “Web Intelligence” system, valued at $2 million and delivered to NTMC in 2019; and a cellular tracking system for military intelligence, valued at $500,000, in 2021.

U-TX was set up in Cyprus by Israelis – it is registered and operates from the island. It is helmed by CEO David Heled and at least two other Israelis are managers in the company. In 2014, U-TX was purchased by Verint, which is traded on the Nasdaq and offers artificial intelligence and data-analysis technologies. Verint has also sold advanced cyberespionage tools to oppressive regimes like those in South Sudan, Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan, investigations over the past decade revealed.

In 2021, Verint spun off its security operations into a new company called Cognyte, which shares an address with Verint in Herzliya, Israel and supplies the same cybersecurity services Verint once did. U-TX operates today under the name Cognyte.

U-TX, Cognyte and Heled did not respond to requests for comment. No response about the purchase of Israeli spyware was received from Bangladesh’s Interior and Foreign Ministries.

Jurre van Bergen and Sharad Vyas of OCCRP and Zulkarnain Saer Khan took part in this investigation.

 
Last edited:
. .

Israeli spyware and surveillance tools sold to Bangladesh - report​

By JERUSALEM POST STAFF
Published: JANUARY 10, 2023 09:01
 Police officers check commuters at a checkpost during a countrywide lockdown, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, July 1, 2021. (photo credit: REUTERS/MOHAMMAD PONIR HOSSAIN)
zoom-image-icon.svg

Police officers check commuters at a checkpost during a countrywide lockdown, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, July 1, 2021.

(photo credit: REUTERS/MOHAMMAD PONIR HOSSAIN)

Israel and Bangladesh do not have diplomatic relations and Bangladesh bans imports from Israel.​


Companies run by Israeli businessmen have sold spyware and surveillance tools to Bangladesh, despite a lack of diplomatic relations between Israel and Bangladesh, a report by Haaretz revealed on Tuesday.

Israeli companies and a company run by a former IDF intelligence commander but based in Europe sold the tools to Bangladeshi authorities in recent years. Israeli government regulations reportedly prohibit the sales of such technologies to Bangladesh and Bangladeshi regulations prohibit the import of Israeli products.

According to Haaretz, export records show that a SpearHead surveillance system made by the Passitora company was delivered to the South Asian country in June 2022. Passitora is owned by Tal Dillian, a former chief commander in the technological unit of the IDF's Intelligence Directorate.

Three people who were senior officers in the Intelligence Directorate told The New York Times, that Dilian was forced to retire from the IDF in 2003 after an internal investigation raised suspicions that he had been involved in funds mismanagement.

In 2019, Cyprus police began investigating Dilian after he spoke to Forbesabout the SpearHead system, a surveillance van he was testing in the island nation as part of a company he owned called WiSpear. The spy van, a converted GMC ambulance equipped with millions of dollars of surveillance equipment, could access any phone within a 1-kilometer radius and read their WhatsApp messages, Facebook chats, texts, contacts and more.


 EVEN AFTER THE Cyberserve/Atraf disaster, Bennett is more afraid of overregulation than he is of lacking the power to save the private sector from its own occasional cyber laziness or cheapness. (credit: KACPER PEMPEL/ILLUSTRATION PHOTO/REUTERS)
zoom-image-icon.svg
EVEN AFTER THE Cyberserve/Atraf disaster, Bennett is more afraid of overregulation than he is of lacking the power to save the private sector from its own occasional cyber laziness or cheapness. (credit: KACPER PEMPEL/ILLUSTRATION PHOTO/REUTERS)

Dilian told Forbes that the companies that provide surveillance tech can't be held responsible for abuses. "We are not the policemen of the world, and we are not the judges of the world. We work with the good guys. And sometimes the good guys don’t behave."

In June 2021, the Bangladeshi cabinet decided to buy a surveillance vehicle from a company called Toru Group Limited. Haaretz found that the company is registered in the British Virgin Islands, but its website makes no reference to the sort of vehicle Bangladeshi authorities had purchased. The company's CEO is an Israeli citizen named Assaf Elias.


A number of sources informed Haaretz that the surveillance vehicle purchased by Bangladesh was actually provided by Dilian's company, with Elias serving as a middleman.The CEO of the Toru Group reportedly served as a middleman for other deals with Dilian as well.


Official documents from Bangladesh’s Interior Ministry shared in the report show that the commander of the country's National Telecommunication Monitoring Center (NTMC), which monitors Bangladeshi citizens and has been accused of eavesdropping on opposition officials, protesters and ordinary citizens, flew to Greece multiple times to train on the surveillance vehicle.

The report additionally found that an Israeli company called Prelysis sold a surveillance system that intercepts Wi-Fi communications to Bangladesh's internal intelligence agency in 2019. The system was shipped through Cyprus, with Cypriot export records showing the deal costing about $3 million.

Prelysis is registered in both Israel and Cyprus and was founded and directed by Israeli citizen Kobi Naveh. Naveh stated that he could not respond when asked whether his company is overseen by Israel's Defense Ministry, according to Haaretz.

Additional Cyprus export records show that in 2019 a company called Coralco Tech, based in Singapore, provide equipment for the "active monitoring of mobile phones" to the Bangladeshi military. The company is owned by Israeli Eyal Almog and is also registered in Israel under his name.

Coralco told Haaretz that "due to the nature of its deals, the company does not comment on the identity of its clients and the products that they buy. In general, all deals involving the company are fully reported while attaining the proper licenses from the regulatory bodies, including Israel’s Defense Ministry. The company sells its products after an internal vetting process that takes into account human rights violations."

Yet another company called U-TX technologies also provided surveillance equipment to Bangladesh through Cyprus in 2019 and in 2021. The company is run by Israeli David Heled and there are at least two other Israelis serving as managers at the company.

Not the first time Israeli surveillance tech sold to Bangladesh

This isn't the first time Israeli surveillance tech has been reported as ending up in the South Asian country.

In 2021, Al Jazeera reported that Israeli-made surveillance equipment used to monitor mobile phones was bought by Bangladesh in 2018 using a Bangkok-based middleman. The technology in that deal was provided by a company called Picsix.

Picsix's website states that it "develops cutting-edge interception technology for government agencies around the world" and that the company was founded by former Israeli intelligence experts. The company's headquarters are in Even Yehuda, according to Israel's Defense Ministry. According to LinkedIn, the CEO of Picsix is Menachem Kenan.

Cellebrite, another Israeli firm, sold surveillance tech to Bangladesh's Rapid Action Battalion in 2021, according to Haaretz.

Cyprus is a hub for spyware and surveillance tech

Cyprus has become a central hub for the spyware and surveillance tech industry, with the European Parliament's Committee of Inquiry investigating the use of Pegasus and equivalent surveillance spyware in November finding that "on paper, there is a robust legal framework, including EU rules, but in practice, Cyprus is an attractive place for companies selling surveillance technologies."

"Recent scandals have damaged the reputation of the country though and a set of new legislative initiatives tightening the legal framework for exports and improving compliance is expected to be finalised in 2023." The report pointed to Dilian's interview with Forbes as an example of scandal in the island country, with multiple pages of the report focusing on Dilian and his associates.

The committee's report also noted that "Cyprus seems to have a very close collaboration with Israel in the area of surveillance technologies" and that the country is home to about 29 Israeli surveillance tech companies.

Israeli spyware industry under fire

Israeli spyware and surveillance tech have been in the spotlight in recent years after scandals surrounding the use of technology from the NSO Group, Candiru and other Israeli companies by governments around the world to target activists, politicians and journalists.


In December, The New York Times revealed that, despite blacklisting the NSO Group in 2021, US authorities have used other Israeli spyware technologies to hack mobile phones. The Drug Enforcement Administration has deployed a tool called Graphite, made by the Israeli firm Paragon, five people familiar with the agency’s operations told the Times.


In 2021, Forbes revealed that Paragon was cofounded and directed by Ehud Schneorson, the former commander of the IDF Intelligence Directorate's Unit 8200, and former prime minister Ehud Barak.


The Times additionally found that the CIA had purchased NSO's Pegasus for the government of Djibouti under the Trump administration and that the FBI had attempted to deploy Pegasus as well in 2020 and 2021, but eventually abandoned the idea.


In 2021, the US Commerce Department placed NSO and Candiru on a blacklist, banning American companies from doing business with them. The White House has also warned that it would fight the "illegitimate use of technology, including commercial spyware and surveillance technology, and we will stand against digital authoritarianism.”


Two senior Israeli officials and an Israeli tech company executive told the Times that tougher restrictions have been placed on Israel's cybersecurity industry in order to prevent further blacklisting, including a restriction on the number of countries to which the companies can sell their spyware. This has led to severe financial consequences and sent three companies into bankruptcy.


The Israeli Globes business daily reported in April that the Defense Ministry has been making it extremely difficult for spyware companies to sell software abroad, even canceling existing permits before they expire.


Amir Eshel, the outgoing director general of the Defense Ministry, told the Times that the Defense Ministry has little power over any Israeli who sets up businesses outside Israel.“It certainly disturbs me that a veteran of our intelligence and cyber units, who employs other former senior officials, operates around the world without any oversight."

 
. . .
View attachment 911017

Prime Minister of Bangladesh Sheikh Hasina addresses the 77th session of the United Nations General Assembly at UN headquarters in September.Credit: Jason DeCrow /AP

National Security & Cyber

In Response to Haaretz Investigation, Bangladesh Says It Made No ‘Direct’ Purchases of Spytech From Israel​

Four companies – either Israeli or with an Israeli connection – were found in a report published Tuesday to have sold advanced spyware via Cyprus or Singapore to the world’s third-largest Muslim country, despite its poor human rights record

Oded YaronZulkarnain Saer Khan
Jan 11, 2023 6:28 pm IST

The Haaretz expose published on Tuesday showing that Israeli cybersecurity companies registered overseas sold spyware systems to Bangladesh – a country that does not recognize Israel – was the top news in the country, with major media outlets giving the investigation extensive coverage.

In response to media inquiries, Bangladesh Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan did not deny that the government purchased the spyware but said it did not do so “directly” from Israel.

An identical response came from Maj. Gen. Ziaul Ahsan, director general of the National Telecommunication Monitoring Center, or NTMC, a government body that purchased the Israeli systems.

A Home Ministry high official told Bangladesh’s New Age daily that "the ministry had no scope to procure any items ‘directly’ from Israel, but the government definitely wanted to upgrade its surveillance system to protect the nation and its ‘security.’”

“We need to see whether these technologies are being abused or not,” the official said.

Using official Bangladeshi government documents and international export records, Haaretz revealed on Tuesday that four companies that are either Israeli or registered abroad but with a clear Israeli connection had sold Bangladesh advanced monitoring systems through intermediaries in Cyprus, Singapore and Switzerland.

They did so despite the country’s chronically poor human rights record and the fact that Bangladesh – the world’s third-largest Muslim country – doesn’t recognize Israel.

The systems were sold to Bangladeshi government agencies that have been implicated in human rights violations, enabling them to monitor network traffic, hack into wireless networks, and to track, intercept and extract information from mobile devices.

“Today, there’s no significant political opposition in Bangladesh – the government has the will and the means to suppress its political opponents," says Zulkarnain Saer Khan, a Bangladeshi journalist who now lives in exile and took part in this investigation.

“Bangladesh isn’t capable of providing its citizens with basic infrastructure, but government agencies enjoy the best modern spy technology money can buy. Draconian laws have turned it into the government’s preferred weapon for silencing and intimidating journalists, critics and political activists,” he says.

Israel's Defense Ministry did not respond explicitly to Haaretz queries about how the companies cited in the investigation were supervised and if the sales to Bangladesh had been approved.

“The Defense Ministry acts and will continue to act to enforce illegal defense exports, including the provision of defense services and the export of security-related intellectual property in accordance with powers defined by law,” the ministry said in a statement. “As a rule, the Defense Ministry does not report information on defense-export policies due to national security, diplomatic and strategic considerations.”

 
.
Are people surprised? Political virtue signaling doesn't mean anything in purchases like these
 
.
I am sure it is was done to serve the people better !
 
. . .
is it possible to get a summary, please?
Based on report this is the summary:

Four companies – either Israeli or with an Israeli connection – were found in a report published Tuesday to have sold advanced spyware via Cyprus or Singapore to the world’s third-largest Muslim country, despite its poor human rights record

In response Bangladesh government didn’t deny the report but said they did not make any direct purchase from Israel.
 
.
How about another line of thinking that the BAL govt is purchasing Israeli devices to show America that this govt is friendly towards Israel?

So, America should withdraw sanctions on BD.
 
.

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom