forbiddenstories.org Open in urlscan Pro
185.4.44.114  Public Scan

URL: https://forbiddenstories.org/pegasus-in-rwanda-sister-of-presidential-candidate-high-ranking-rwandan-politicians-added-to-spy...
Submission: On October 21 via api from LU — Scanned from FR

Form analysis 0 forms found in the DOM

Text Content

Skip to content
Threatened journalists
Donate
EN
 * FR

Threatened journalists
Donate
EN
 * FR

Rwanda Classified
 * Reading time: 4 min.


PEGASUS IN RWANDA: SISTER OF PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, HIGH-RANKING RWANDAN
POLITICIANS ADDED TO SPYWARE LIST

A leaked list of phone numbers reveals how Rwandan President Paul Kagame’s
regime used Pegasus spyware sought to track political opponents and members of
his own party.

 * Français
 * English

(Visuel : Mélody Da Fonseca)

Key findings
 * Leaked data suggests Anne Rwigara, the late sister of presidential candidate
   Diane Rwigara, was selected as a target of Pegasus spyware in February 2019
 * Other potential Pegasus targets include several former ministers, including
   the former justice minister Tharcisse Karugarama
 * Multiple sources confirm Rwanda’s access to Pegasus was revoked in 2021



By Phineas Rueckert with Karine Pfenniger and Florian Reynaud (Le Monde)

May 28, 2024

Additional reporting and research: Omer Benjakob (Haaretz) and Samuel Baker
Byansi (M28 Investigates)

The December 28, 2023, death of Anne Rwigara in California took family members
by surprise. Anne, 41, was the sister of Diane Rwigara, a Rwandan opposition
figure who previously tried to run for president. Anne had no prior health
issues and complained to family about stomach pain.

Between unexpected deaths and prolonged prison stints, the Rwigara family had
already suffered multiple tragedies. In 2015, Assinapol, the father, died in a
mysterious road accident. Assinapol was a businessman and financer of Rwanda’s
RPF party, helmed by President Paul Kagame, who has ruled Rwanda with an iron
fist for over 20 years. Two years later, when Diane sought to run for president,
nude photos were leaked after she announced her candidacy. She was later barred
from running by the Electoral Commission, in 2017, and she and her mother
Adeline were charged with fraud and inciting insurrection, and served more than
a year in prison.

Diane and Adeline were acquitted in December 2018. The Rwandan state, however,
didn’t let the Rwigara family out of its sight. In February 2019, a phone number
belonging to Anne was added to a list of Pegasus spyware targets. This spyware
tool, sold by the Israeli company NSO Group, allows state intelligence services
to infiltrate phones remotely, without the user’s awareness.

Forbidden Stories was unable to perform a forensic analysis of the device, and
therefore could not confirm whether it was successfully infected. Nevertheless,
the addition of Anne’s phone number, which was confirmed by multiple sources, to
a list of potential Pegasus targets suggests that she was a person of interest
for a Rwanda-based client operating the spyware tool. 

Anne was one of at least a dozen Rwandan political figures and their family
members whose phone numbers were selected as Pegasus targets, Forbidden Stories
found as part of the Rwanda Classified project, published jointly by 17 media
outlets and coordinated by Forbidden Stories.

A phone number belonging to Anne Rwigara, the sister of presidential hopeful
Diane Rwigara, was added to a list of leaked phone numbers – potential targets
of Pegasus spyware – in February 2019.

Pursuing the work of the late journalist John Williams Ntwali, who had
investigated the death of Assinapol Rwigara before he himself was found dead in
January 2023, Forbidden Stories and its partners spent months digging through
previously unexploited Pegasus data, part of the data leak that led to the 2021
Pegasus Project. The leaked data suggests that high-profile targets, even within
Kagame’s own RPF party, may have been regularly under surveillance.

Out of respect for the privacy of victims, Forbidden Stories is only naming
those individuals who are public figures, having previously served or currently
serving in office. These include Tharcisse Karugarama, Rwanda’s former justice
minister, selected as a target in October 2017. A phone number belonging to
former Minister of Infrastructure James Musoni was selected as a surveillance
target amid allegations of corruption and a cabinet reshuffle in April 2018.
Musoni is Rwanda’s current Ambassador to the Republic of Zimbabwe. At least two
phone numbers belonging to Professor Nshuti Manasseh, Rwanda’s current Senior
Advisor in the Office of the President in charge of Special Assignments, were
also selected as surveillance targets in 2018. 

Forbidden Stories was unable to establish why these individuals were targeted,
nor were we able to access the phones to conduct a forensic analysis. Both
Musoni and Manasseh were previously involved with Crystal Ventures, the
investment arm of Kagame’s RPF party, which allegedly controlled about $500
million in assets within the country in 2012. Manasseh was chairman of the board
until 2013. Various media outlets have reported that Musoni was also involved in
Crystal Ventures, and some have alleged that he was the “de facto head” of the
company. (Musoni and Manasseh did not respond to multiple requests for
comment.) 

Karugarama, the former justice minister, was removed from office in 2013,
reportedly after foreign journalists suggested he had contested Kagame’s
decision to run for a third term.

Former Justice Minister Tharcisse Karugarama at the African Economic Conference
in Kigali on October 30, 2012. Credit: Paul Kagame/Wikimedia Commons

“In many cases that we’ve investigated with Pegasus, we’ve seen a blend of ally
targeting and opponent targeting,” John Scott-Railton, a Senior Researcher at
the University of Toronto’s Citizen Lab, said. “And it doesn’t surprise me that
there would be a dynamic in which both people who are viewed as important
allies, or people whose political viability and reliability is important, would
be targeted for scrutiny as well as people who are viewed as enemies and
opponents.”

Rwanda’s alleged use of spyware to track dissidents didn’t stop at its own
borders. In 2021, the Pegasus Project revealed that the phone of Carine Kanimba,
the daughter of human rights defender Paul Rusesabagina, had been infected with
Pegasus spyware in Belgium. Past reporting from the Financial Times documented
Pegasus use against dissidents in Belgium, the UK and South Africa.

Other potential targets revealed at the time included Gatera Gashabana, a lawyer
who represented the Rwigara family, as well as a journalist who covered the case
against Diane and her mother Adeline.

Grady Vaughan, a researcher at the NGO Freedom House, which has studied Rwanda’s
transnational repression, explained that this type of surveillance is typical of
authoritarian regimes. “A lot of times spyware is used to find out where someone
lives, and then their family members may be harassed,” he said. “Ultimately,
this may lead to a physical assault or assassination.”

Pegasus can be used to infiltrate phones remotely, without the user’s awareness.
Credit: Forbidden Films

Rwanda, for its part, has officially denied using Pegasus. But multiple Israeli
intelligence sources confirmed to Forbidden Stories’s partner Haaretz that the
country had signed a contract by 2017, with the participation of a Rwandan
police officer. According to those sources, the contract was either ended or not
renewed in 2021. (A Rwandan government spokesperson declined to comment on
questions sent by the consortium. The Rwanda National Police did not respond to
our request for comment.) 

In an email, NSO Group, which sells Pegasus, insisted that its technology is
“only sold to vetted intelligence and law enforcement agencies” for use “to
prevent crime and terrorist attacks.” While NSO cannot confirm or deny specific
customers, a spokesperson added: “We would like to emphasize that NSO has had no
active clients in Rwanda since 2021.”

Scott-Railton of Citizen Lab, which first identified Pegasus activity in Rwanda
in June 2017, confirmed that the watchdog had not seen recent Pegasus activity.
“We see no evidence indicating that Rwanda is a current customer,” he said.

Rwanda, meanwhile, is gearing up for presidential elections on July 15. Kagame
is widely expected to win.

Diane Rwigara – whose sister’s death remains elusive – announced on May 8 in a
post on X (formerly Twitter) that she was planning on running for office against
Kagame in the 2024 elections. “A new chapter for Rwanda begins now. Together we
will make history! Join me as I run for President,” she wrote.




SEE ALSO

nomine
Rwanda Classified
Paul Rusesabagina: “No one can silence me”

Human rights activist Paul Rusesabagina, portrayed as a hero in the movie “Hotel
Rwanda,” gave one of...
nomine
Rwanda Classified
In the West and online, Rwanda’s influence machine keeps churning

Behind Rwanda's gleaming image promoted in international forums, conferences and
showrooms, is a hidden...
nomine
Rwanda Classified
“Clandestine activities” and suspicious deaths strain Belgium-Rwanda relations

The murky murder of a Rwandan opposition figure and the deaths of two Belgians
in South Africa are among...
These investigations should never have been published. Share them.
Icon-twitter Icon-insta Icon-linkdein Icon-youtube Icon-tiktok Icon-facebook
Killing the journalist
won't kill the story.
Donate
Sign up for our newsletter
© Forbidden Stories 2024
 * Contact us

 * Our mission
 * All our articles
 * Protect your work
 * News
 * Funding
 * Impact

 * Terms of Use

© Forbidden Stories 2024