Turkish media reported today (Thursday) that the country last month arrested, in a major operation by the Turkish security service MIT and the local police, a cell of 15 people who spied for the Mossad.
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According to the report, 200 security forces personnel participated in a wave of arrests in which five different spy cells, each consisting of three members, were captured. Media outlets in the country did not reveal the nationality of the detainees, but reported that they were of Arab ethnicity. According to the Turks, the spies provided the Mossad with information about foreign students from universities in Turkey who might work in the defense industry in the future, and about various associations and organizations operating there. The detainees also spied on senior Hamas terrorist organization officials operating in Turkey. According to the report, the network members were arrested in a covert operation after a year-long surveillance. The report also said that the suspects passed the information to Mossad personnel using public phones in exchange for money. 200 Turkish intelligence personnel followed the spies - and they were arrested in several different districts, about a week and a half ago. The report also states that members of the network also transferred information to their operators using an encrypted application called "Protonmail." Encrypted software called "SafeUM" and the WhatsApp network were also used. As you may recall, about three weeks ago, the Palestinian Authority was in turmoil after seven Palestinians disappeared in Istanbul, Konya in central Turkey, and in the border area between Turkey and Greece. Three of them are residents of the Gaza Strip and four from Judea and Samaria.