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  • U.S. Treasury Lifts Sanctions on Three Individuals Linked to Intellexa and Predator Spyware

    U.S. Treasury Lifts Sanctions on Three Individuals Linked to Intellexa and Predator Spyware


    Dec 31, 2026Ravie LakshmananSpyware / Mobile Security

    The U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) on Tuesday removed three individuals linked to the Intellexa Consortium, the holding company behind a commercial spyware known as Predator, from the specially designated nationals list.

    The names of the individuals are as follows –

    • Merom Harpaz
    • Andrea Nicola Constantino Hermes Gambazzi
    • Sara Aleksandra Fayssal Hamou
    Cybersecurity

    Hamou was sanctioned by OFAC in March 2024, and Harpaz and Gambazzi were targeted in September 2024 in connection with developing, operating, and distributing Predator. It’s currently not known why they were removed from the list.

    Harpaz is said to be working as a manager of Intellexa S.A., while Gambazzi was identified as the owner of Thalestris Limited and Intellexa Limited. Thalestris, Treasury Department said, held the distribution rights to the spyware, and processed transactions on behalf of other entities within the Intellexa Consortium. It’s also the parent company to Intellexa S.A.

    Hamou was listed by the Treasury as one of the key enablers of the Intellexa Consortium, working as a corporate off-shoring specialist in charge of providing managerial services, including renting office space in Greece on behalf of Intellexa S.A. It’s not known if these individuals are still holding the same positions.

    At that time, the agency said the proliferation of commercial spyware presents a growing security risk to the U.S. and its citizens. It called for the need to establish guardrails to ensure the responsible development and use of these technologies while balancing human rights and civil liberties of individuals.

    “Any hasty decisions to remove sanctions from individuals involved in attacking U.S. persons and interests risk signaling to bad actors that this behavior may come with little consequences as long as you pay enough [money] for fancy lobbyists,” said Natalia Krapiva, senior tech legal counsel at Access Now.

    The development comes merely weeks after an Amnesty International report revealed that a human rights lawyer from Pakistan’s Balochistan province was targeted by a Predator attack attempt via a WhatsApp message.

    Active since at least 2019, Predator is designed for stealth, leaving little to no traces of compromise, while harvesting sensitive data from infected devices. It’s typically delivered via 1-click or zero-click attack vectors.

    Cybersecurity

    Similar to NSO Group’s Pegasus, the tool is officially marketed for counterterrorism and law enforcement use. But investigations have revealed a broader pattern of its deployment against civil society figures, including journalists, activists, and politicians.

    An investigation from Recorded Future published this month found continued use of Predator despite increased public reporting and international measures.

    “Several key trends are shaping the spyware ecosystem, including growing balkanization as companies split along geopolitical lines, with some sanctioned entities seeking renewed legitimacy through acquisitions while others shift toward regions with weaker oversight,” the Mastercard-owned company said.

    “Furthermore, rising competition and secrecy surrounding high-value exploit technologies are heightening risks of corruption, insider leaks, and attacks on spyware vendors themselves.”



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  • Heated Rivalry author Rachel Reid says TV show’s success led to help with her Parkinson’s disease

    Heated Rivalry author Rachel Reid says TV show’s success led to help with her Parkinson’s disease


    Steven McIntoshEntertainment reporter

    Getty Images Rachel Reid attends the premiere of "Heated Rivalry" at TIFF Lightbox on November 24, 2025 in Toronto, OntarioGetty Images

    Rachel Reid published her first instalment of her six-book Game Changers series in 2018

    The author of Heated Rivalry has revealed the success of the TV adaptation has resulted in her receiving specialist help with her Parkinson’s disease.

    Rachel Reid, 45, was diagnosed with the condition in the summer of 2023, around the same time she was approached about adapting her book series for the screen.

    Heated Rivalry, which centres on an illicit same-sex relationship between two ice hockey players, has become one of the most talked-about new TV shows of recent weeks.

    In an interview with Variety, the Canadian author explained that a Parkinson’s expert contacted her after hearing about her diagnosis in a publicity interview for the series.

    The subsequent appointment she has secured with a neurologist, Reid said, “could change things for me, because I’m not really getting the treatment that I should be getting”.

    Reid published her first book in the Game Changers series in 2018.

    Five further books followed, and the TV version soon created a stir after launching in North America in late November.

    The show, which is adapted and directed by Jacob Tierney, is set to launch in the UK on 10 January on Sky and streaming service Now.

    Speaking to Variety, Reid said an “amazing thing” had come out of the attention the show has received.

    “Jacob was on CNN a few weeks ago. For whatever reason, the interviewer asked him about my Parkinson’s diagnosis,” she recalled.

    “I thought it was kind of odd, but then the next day, one of the top Parkinson’s experts in the world reached out to me and asked if he could help me.”

    Reid explained: “I’ve never gotten to talk to a Parkinson’s expert. I’ve been on a five-year waiting list here because I live in a very small place.

    “Now he’s found me a Parkinson’s expert, a neurologist, and I have an appointment in a couple weeks. “That could change things for me because I’m not really getting the treatment that I should be getting.

    “He also told me how to change my medication so I can sleep because I never slept. That change made me sleep through the night, which really helps with writing.”

    Sky Connor Storrie and Hudson Williams star in Heated RivalrySky

    Heated Rivalrly has been a huge hit internationally, and is due to launch in the UK in January

    Reid said her Parkinson’s made it hard for her to write “because I can barely control a mouse”.

    “I can’t type for very long,” she continued. “It’s hard for me to sit in a chair for very long. I need to figure out new ways to write.

    “I don’t know if that will be voice-to-text. I don’t know if I can write that way. It doesn’t feel natural, but I need to figure out something because it is taking me a very long time to write now.”

    Heated Rivalry follows rival hockey players Shane and Ilya, played by Hudson Williams and Connor Storrie.

    The pair are bound by rivalry and ambition, but begin a secret affair which evolves into a years-long relationship.

    What is Parkinson’s disease?

    Parkinson’s is a progressive condition that worsens over time.

    Those with the disease have too little of the chemical dopamine in their brain because some of the nerve cells that make it have stopped working.

    • Symptoms include:
    • involuntary shaking of parts of the body
    • slow movement
    • stiff and inflexible muscles

    Source: Parkinson’s UK



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  • Hundreds of thousands mourn Bangladesh’s ex-prime minister at state funeral

    Hundreds of thousands mourn Bangladesh’s ex-prime minister at state funeral


    Hundreds of thousands of people travelled from across Bangladesh to the capital Dhaka on Wednesday to pay their final respects to former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia.

    Zia, who was the country’s first female prime minister, died on Tuesday from a prolonged illness. She was 80.

    The mourners held out their hands in prayer and carried flags printed with her photographs as a motorcade carrying Zia’s body – including the hearse wrapped with the national flag – drove on streets near the parliament house.

    Flags were flown at half-mast and thousands of security officers have been deployed.

    “I have come this far just to say goodbye. I know I won’t be able to see her face, but at least I could see the [vehicle] carrying her for the last rites,” Setara Sultana, an activist from Zia’s Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), told the BBC.

    Sharmina Siraj, a mother of two, called Zia “an inspiration”, noting that stipends introduced by the former leader to improve women’s education made a “huge impact” on her daughters.

    “It is difficult to imagine women in leadership positions anytime soon,” she told AFP news agency.

    India’s External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar, the Speaker of Pakistan’s National Assembly Sardar Ayaz Sadiq and Bhutan’s Foreign Minister Lyonpo DN Dhungyel were among those who attended the funeral.

    Earlier in the day, Zia’s body was taken to the house of her son Tarique Rahman, who was seen reciting the Quran beside his mother’s office.

    Zia will be buried next to her husband Ziaur Rahman, who was assassinated in 1981 while serving as president – an incident that thrusted Zia into political limelight.

    She went on to lead the BNP in the country’s first elections in 20 years. She was dubbed an “uncompromising leader” after refusing to participate in a controversial election under military ruler General Hussain Muhammad Ershad in the 1980s.

    Her career, which included spells in prison and house arrest, was defined by a bitter feud with her arch-rival Sheikh Hasina.

    Over the past 16 years, under Hasina’s Awami League government, Zia emerged as the most prominent symbol of resistance to Hasina’s rule many saw as increasingly autocratic.

    Despite Zia’s illness, the BNP said she had intended to run for parliament in February, when the country will vote for the first time since a popular revolution last year unseated Hasina.

    According to the party’s candidate list released earlier this month, Zia was to contest in three constituencies.

    The party is eyeing a return to power, and if that happens, Zia’s son Tarique Rahman is expected to become the country’s new leader. Rahman, 60, had only returned to Bangladesh last week after 17 years in self-imposed exile in London.

    “The country mourns the loss of a guiding presence that shaped its democratic aspirations,” Rahman said following his mother’s passing on Tuesday.



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