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MEXICO CITY (Reuters) -Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador on Tuesday denied his administration spied on journalists or opponents following a report that the phones of at least three people investigating human rights abuses were infected with Pegasus spyware. An analysis by digital watchdog Citizen Lab on Sunday found that phones belonging to two journalists and a human rights activist were infected with Pegasus between 2019 and 2021. Lopez Obrador won office in 2018 after an election campaign in which he pledged to put an end to the government spying on its citizens and later said he would not use Pegasus. Pegasus belongs to Israeli spyware firm NSO Group, which typically only sells the software to governments or law enforcement. When asked whether he knew about the purchase of Pegasus, which can be used to remotely break into phones, Lopez Obrador said: It s not true that journalists or opponents are spied on. The military carried out intelligence work, which was not spying ....