It is a bitter irony that on May 3, 2024—a date celebrated globally as World Press Freedom Day—one of Angola’s most prominent journalists was being silently stripped of his privacy. According to new forensic findings from Amnesty International, that was the exact timeframe when the iPhone of Teixeira Cândido, the Secretary-General of the Union of Angolan Journalists, was compromised by Predator spyware.
This isn’t just another hacking story. It is the first publicly confirmed instance of this specific military-grade spyware being deployed against an individual in Angola. It serves as a stark reminder that despite international crackdowns and aggressive sanctions from the United States, the market for mercenary surveillance tools is alive, well, and dangerous.
How exactly does Predator take over a device?
You might be wondering how a piece of software can bypass the robust security of a modern iPhone. In Cândido’s case, the vector was deceptively simple: a malicious link sent via WhatsApp. Once clicked, the spyware—developed by the Intellexa alliance—effectively turned the device against its owner.
Predator operates much like the infamous Pegasus spyware from NSO Group. It doesn’t just steal files; it grants the attacker total remote control. We are talking about full access to the microphone, the camera, all messages, and the photo gallery. The phone becomes a listening device in the journalist’s pocket.
![Illustration related to Predator Spyware: Angola Journalist Hacked [Amnesty Report]](https://story.bytewire.press/wp-content/uploads/bytewire-images/2026/02/predator-spyware-angola-journalist-hack-intellexa-fa98009c9f.webp)
The psychological toll of this kind of intrusion is devastating. Teixeira Cândido described the violation viscerally, stating, “I literally felt naked! It’s as if someone I don’t know had stripped me naked in public. It’s like taking a shower with people watching.” This isn’t just surveillance; it is an act of intimidation designed to chill investigative reporting.
Why haven’t sanctions stopped Intellexa?
This is the question frustrating privacy advocates and policymakers alike. The Intellexa alliance, a labyrinthine network of companies with roots in Europe and Israel, has been in the crosshairs of the U.S. government for some time. The U.S. Department of the Treasury has levied sanctions against the consortium in an attempt to curb the proliferation of commercial spyware.
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![Diagram related to Predator Spyware: Angola Journalist Hacked [Amnesty Report]](https://story.bytewire.press/wp-content/uploads/bytewire-images/2026/02/predator-spyware-angola-journalist-hack-intellexa-5ea5e6654a.webp)


