Israel's internal intelligence agency, the Shin Bet, has admitted to using spyware to track Palestinians' phones and sending them threatening text messages during the protests in occupied East Jerusalem last May.
Shin Bet admits sending threatening texts to Palestinians during May protests
4 Feb 2022 - 12:46
Israel's internal intelligence agency, the Shin Bet, has admitted to using spyware to track Palestinians' phones and sending them threatening text messages during the protests in occupied East Jerusalem last May.
The Shin Bet's revelation came a day after the Israeli police admitted using the same tracking system against civilians.
Many Palestinians in East Al-Quds and Palestinian citizens of Israel have received phone messages telling them not to go near al-Aqsa Mosque and warning that they will be punished.
In May last year, protests erupted in East Al-Quds's Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood against home eviction orders handed to Palestinians to make way for settlers and the storming of al-Aqsa Mosque by Israeli forces.
The protest escalated into a full-blown 11-day war between Israel and Palestinian armed groups in the Gaza Strip, while protests in mixed Arab-Jewish cities inside Israel led to dozens of deaths.
The Shin Bet's messages, written in Arabic, read: "Hello! You have been identified to have taken part in violent acts at al-Aqsa Mosque. We will punish you - Israeli intelligence."
In a letter to the Ministry of Justice this week, the Shin Bet admitted that messages were also sent to Palestinians who "did not raise suspicion".
According to Haaretz, the Shin Bet said that there was "a clear security need to express an urgent message to a very large number of people. Each of whom exists a basis for suspicion that they were involved in committing violent crimes, and there is a likely possibility that they will be involved, in the immediate present, in carrying out additional such acts," Shin Bet said in the letter.
However, some Palestinians who received the messages were not near al-Aqsa Mosque and had not taken part in the protests.
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