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Espionage network in Egypt working for Israel

STAFF WRITER 15:24 HRS IST

Cairo, Dec 21 (PTI) An espionage network working for
Israel has been identified in Egypt, a top official of the
country has said.

Main member of the network Ziad Hussien has travelled a
number of times to Israel and was trained by Israeli
intelligence, Egypt’s prosecutor general Abd-al-Megeid Mahmud
announced yesterday.

The main activity of the network was to interfere in the
path of phones calls made by influential figures in Egypt and
transfer them to Israel.

Members of the network had communication offices in the
Cairo suburb of Maadi, he said.

Last week news sites had reported that employees of
Egyptian cellular service provider Mobinil were allegedly
eavesdropping on phone calls of Egyptian ministers and later
selling the information they obtained but the company
categorically denied such claims.

Meanwhile Egyptian authorities have also nabbed a local
businessman Tarek Hassan on charges of spying.


Russia, U.K. Each Expel a Diplomat After British Allegations of Espionage

The U.K. and Russia each expelled a
diplomat from the other country after what the U.K. said was
“clear evidence” of espionage.

The U.K. requested Dec. 10 that the Russian embassy in
London withdraw a staff member in response to “clear evidence
of activities by the Russian intelligence services against U.K.
interests,” Foreign Secretary William Hague said in a statement
today.

“Russia responded on Dec. 16 by requesting the removal of
a member of our embassy staff in Moscow,” Hague said. “We
reject any basis for that action.”

Both diplomats have now been withdrawn, he said.

Russia protested earlier this month following media reports
that U.K. authorities had detained a 25-year-old Russian woman,
Yekaterina Zatuliveter, on suspicion of espionage. She was
working as a researcher in the House of Commons.

Russia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said Dec. 7 that it
was “under no illusions” regarding the continued presence in
the U.K. of “very influential forces that have no interest in
normalizing Russo-British relations.” A week later, the
ministry said that Zatuliveter had been freed on bail while
appealing her deportation and condemned what it described as
“rampant, paranoid spy-mania.”

Relations between the two countries reached a post-Cold War
low after the 2006 killing of dissident KGB agent Alexander Litvinenko in London. Each country expelled four of the other’s
diplomats in 2007, and in 2008 Moscow forced the British Council
cultural promotion body to shut its offices in Russia outside
the capital.

“We remain open to a more productive relationship with
Russia, as with any other country, on the basis of respect for
our laws,” Hague said in his statement today.

Russia’s foreign ministry declined to comment today on the
diplomats’ withdrawal.

To contact the reporters on this story:
Anna Shiryaevskaya in Moscow at
ashiryaevska [at] bloomberg [dot] net
Henry Meyer in Moscow at
hmeyer4 [at] bloomberg [dot] net

To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Will Kennedy at
wkennedy3 [at] bloomberg [dot] net
Willy Morris at
wmorris [at] bloomberg [dot] net


US preparing to indict me for espionage: Assange

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London: Fearing that his freedom may be “short lived”, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange said on Friday that the US is preparing to indict him on espionage charges and it was likely that he may be extradited.

Assange he had an emotional reunion with his mother at the 600-acre Suffolk estate where he is currently under house arrest after being released on bail, Assange told newsmen: “The US is preparing to indict me on espionage charges. I am afraid my freedom may be short-lived.” It was increasingly likely that that the US would try to extradite him, he said.

He said an “illegal investigation” is being carried out against him, the Daily Mail reported.

US preparing to indict me for espionage: Assange

A spokeswoman for the US Department of Justice would confirm only that there is “an ongoing investigation into the wikiLeaks matter.”

The whistleblower’s mother Christine Assange, who traveled to London to show her support, joined some of her son’s supporters to celebrate his release from jail at 10-bedroom Ellingham Hall, owned by Vaughan smith, founder of London’s Frontline club.

Assange had champagne and a meal of stew and dumplings to mark the end of his nine-day incarceration at Wandsworth prison as he fights extradition to Sweden on sex assault allegations, which he denies.

Smiling and hugging his mother, Assange, who remains under ‘mansion arrest’ said: “This is not the beginning of the end. It is the end of the beginning.

It has not altered my position, in fact it has confirmed my position to me personally that we are on the right path.”

Assange said he had not been provided with any evidence relating to claims he sexually assaulted two women and claimed certain institutions were involved in an “illegal investigation”.

“We can see that by how certain people who are allegedly affiliated with us were contained at the US border and had their computers seized, and so on.”

Assange said: “I would say that there is a very aggressive investigation, that a lot of face has been lost by some people, and some people have careers to make by pursuing famous cases, but that is actually something that needs

monitoring.”

“We’ve seen the Swedish government, let’s not say the government, a Swedish prosecutor in these representations to the British Government and British coruts said he needed not to provide a single shred of evidence.”

Assange said he had spent 9 days in solitary confinement at Wandsworth Prison, south west London, and had still not been presented with “a single piece of evidence.”

IBNliveMore on: wikileaks, julian assange, US extradition, espionage charges


Wife sues husband for bugging phone because he thought she was having affair

*Upon private request, the personal details of those involved in this matter were removed in 2016*

2010

A jealous husband confessed to his wife that he had bugged her phone because he wrongly suspected her
of having an affair. A successful businessman, was sued by his now ex-wife and agreed to pay her a five-figure out-of-court settlement. But last week, on the day the payment was due, he filed for bankruptcy and now she may never see a penny of the money she is owed.

The couple met through relatives in 1997 and married two years later. But wedded bliss soon gave way to his jealousy and insecurity, according to his wife.

She said she became an ‘open book’ in an effort to make her husband, who was a director and share-holder at his family’s company, feel more secure.

However, in 2008 he sat her down at their home in West Midlands, and told her he had been recording all her phone calls for six months and played her a CD of conversations with family and friends.

‘I was completely shocked,’ she said.

‘I asked him why and he didn’t really have an answer for me. It just comes back to the fact that he was insecure. Maybe he was trying to get something on me having an affair, but there wasn’t one.’

The wife, then, 34, described that moment as ‘the straw that broke the camel’s back’ following years of being questioned about her every move.

The sales manager ended their marriage and sued her husband at the High Court for breach of confidence and misuse of private information. She claimed her ex-husband, then 36, violated her privacy and ruined her career after relaying the recordings to relatives and friends.

At the High Court, he denied tracking his wife, disputing that he had bugged her phone. He did, however, concede that he had told her that he had done so.

However, the two legal teams agreed the undisclosed settlement after the hearing in July. The wife said that she has not seen any money and now fears she never will.

Her solicitor said: ‘We believe that [the husband] disposed of substantial assets by transferring shares to other individuals before declaring himself bankrupt.

‘We will pursue further court action if necessary after considering the report from the Official Receiver.’


Hum-Bugging Your Holidays!

Karen Bleier/AFP/Getty Images

Karen Bleier/AFP/Getty Images

From glneal

How can you “hum-bug” proofed your holidays?  Identity thieves are the new Ebenezers of the season.  They are stealing your identity by preying on your festive holiday spirit.  Whether it is at a house party or an office party, you need to be alert.  What takes a second to steal will take years to fix.

The Colo Bureau of Investigation says you should


Travel light-Don’t take every credit card known to mankind with you when you go holiday shopping; also photocopy the ones you do take with and leave those copies at home.

Keep purse/wallet with you-Don’t leave your wallet or purse in the coat room or on a bed in a room that you can’t see who has access to it.

If you’re having a holiday house party, don’t leave your personal information out in the open (that includes your laptop).  Also, lock your car as it contains your personal information as well.