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Greece's Predator Scandal: AKEL Revives 'Black Van' Case in Cyprus

Published February 27, 2026, 09:11
Greece's Predator Scandal: AKEL Revives 'Black Van' Case in Cyprus

The conviction of four individuals in Greece for the 'Predator' surveillance scandal has garnered international attention. Tal Dillian, Sarah Hamou, Felix Bijou, and Yiannis Lavranos were convicted of trapping 87 individuals, including half of the Greek Cabinet. The total prison sentence imposed amounts to 126 years and eight months, with eight years to be served. This decision has brought the 'black van' scandal and illegal surveillance back to the forefront in Cyprus. Aristos Damianou of AKEL points out that while the perpetrators were convicted in Greece, in Cyprus, despite evidence linking the DISY-Anastasiades government to surveillance companies, criminal prosecution was suspended. Assistant Attorney General Savvas Angelides assured that the 'black van' case in Cyprus is not connected to the events in Greece or the use of surveillance software abroad. The investigation, which began in 2019, did not reveal any surveillance or interception of communications, but rather automated recording of technical data (IMSI and MAC) during a test operation. Ws Wispear Systems Ltd. was charged and fined €925,000 for illegal processing of personal data, which was paid. Subsequently, the company pleaded guilty to 42 charges and was fined an additional €76,000, bringing the total fine to €1 million. Criminal prosecution against three individuals was dropped due to the circumstances of the case and the company's acceptance of responsibility.