The company accused of using the
personal data of millions of Facebook users to influence how people vote
is not shy about its international portfolio.
Political
consulting firm Cambridge Analytica is facing questions over whether it
used personal data to sway the outcome of the US 2016 presidential
election and the UK Brexit referendum.
But its reach extends well
beyond the UK and US, with its website boasting of supporting more than
100 campaigns across five continents.
The company has suspended its CEO, Alexander Nix, who was filmed as part of a Channel 4 investigation
giving examples of how the firm could swing elections around the world
with underhand tactics such as smear campaigns and honey traps.
The UK-based company, which denies any wrongdoing, has an extensive record of work abroad. Here's what we know about it.
Europe
As
part of the Channel 4 investigation, executives said Cambridge
Analytica and its parent company Strategic Communications Laboratories
(SCL) had worked in more than 200 elections across the world, including
in the Czech Republic.
"We've just used a different organisation
to run a very, very successful project in an Eastern European country
where... no-one even knew they were there," company executive Mark
Turnbull said.
Cambridge Analytica's website also says it was involved in political campaigning in Italy in 2012 , on behalf of a "resurgent political party last successful in the 1980s".
"CA's
suggested reforms allowed the party to perform beyond its initial
expectations at a time of turbulence in Italian politics," it says.
But the role of SCL goes back much further. It claims to have helped the Orange Revolution in 2004 in Ukraine which helped bring the pro-Western President Viktor Yushchenko to power.
"SCL
succeeded in maintaining the cohesion of the coalition to ensure a
hard-fought victory," an old post on the SCL website reads.
Image copyright
Getty Images
Image caption
SCL says it was hired to "erode and weaken" anti-government opposition in Donetsk
More recently, SCL says it was hired by the Ukrainian government to provide "localised communications campaigns" to help them win back control of Donetsk during the conflict in eastern Ukraine.
"The
final project report was delivered to the President of Ukraine...this
report was pivotal in later national decisions," the company says.
Kenya
Cambridge
Analytica was used twice to help secure victory for Kenyan President
Uhuru Kenyatta - first in 2013, then again in 2017.
Officially, the company's website boasts of doing in-depth research to uncover the issues driving voters in the country.
But Mr Turnbull told Channel 4 their input actually went much further.
"We
have rebranded the entire party twice, written the manifesto, done
research, analysis, messaging. I think we wrote all the speeches and we
staged the whole thing - so just about every element of this candidate,"
he said.
Mr
Kenyatta's Jubilee Party has downplayed the impact of the group, saying
it employed the company's parent company, SCL, to help with branding.
But
the country's main opposition coalition - the National Super Alliance
(Nasa) - has called for a full investigation to be carried out.
"This
was a criminal enterprise which clearly wanted to subvert the will of
the people - through manipulation, through propaganda," official Norman
Magaya told the BBC.
Image copyright
Getty Images
Image caption
The firm says it controlled "every element" of President Kenyatta's election victory last year
Nigeria
Reports suggest that the data analysis firm also played a controversial role in Nigeria's 2015 presidential election.
The
UK's Guardian newspaper says that Cambridge Analytica was hired by a
Nigerian billionaire who was "panicking at the idea of a change of
government" to work on then-president Goodluck Jonathan's re-election
campaign.
The newspaper said sources familiar with the campaign
described how the company was looking to collect "kompromat" -
compromising material or information - on opposition leader Muhammadu
Buhari.
Image copyright
Red Media Africa
Image caption
Goodluck Jonathan congratulated Muhammadu Buhari (pictured) on his win
Witnesses told the paper that Cambridge Analytica
was then offered material from Israeli computer hackers amid election
campaigns in Nigeria and St Kitts and Nevis.
The hackers had reportedly gained access to the private emails of two politicians who are now heads of state.
"Cambridge Analytica was paid an estimated £2m to orchestrate a ferocious campaign against [Mr Buhari] ," the Guardian reported.
Mr Buhari went on to win the presidential race and there is no suggestion that Mr Jonathan was aware of any alleged wrongdoing.
SCL Elections, Cambridge Analytica's parent company, has denied receiving or using hacked or stolen information.
Mexico
In
July 2017, Cambridge Analytica revealed that it had teamed up with a
phone app in Mexico and Colombia called Pig.gi, which gives users free
service in exchange for watching adverts and taking surveys.
The firm was hoping to use data mined from Pig.gi to help a candidate in Mexico's July 2018 presidential election , according to Bloomberg.
"There's
a huge opportunity in this country to find the issues that are
important for people and actually turn people out to vote," Cambridge
Analytica's vice-president of business development, Brittany Kaiser,
said.
Separately, it was reported in October that the head of
operations for Cambridge Analytica in Mexico, Arielle Dale Karro, had
posted an advertisement on a Facebook page for foreigners living in the
country.
The post sought people "with significant political experience" who were interested in becoming a campaign manager in one of eight Mexican states, Buzzfeed reported.
Cambridge
Analytica later denied that Ms Karro was carrying out any political
work for the firm. Mr Nix also stated that "Cambridge Analytica is not
working for any political party in Mexico".
Media caption Former Cambridge Analytica employee Christopher Wylie says the firm planted fake news
Brazil
Cambridge Analytica was reportedly "prospecting for clients in Brazil's presidential race" that is due to take place later this year.
CA
Ponte, a partnership between Cambridge Analytica and Brazilian
consultancy firm Ponte Estrategia, "had been in touch with
representatives of three potential candidates", according to Bloomberg.
The
partnership's director André Torretta told the El Pais newspaper [in
Portuguese] that he had been approached by two presidential campaigns but had not reached a deal with either.
India
Cambridge
Analytica is part of the India branch of the SCL group which offers
"political campaign management" among its services.
It lists India's two main political parties - the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and Congress - among its clients.
Himanshu Sharma, the firm's vice president says on his publicly available LinkedIn profile that the company has "successfully managed four election campaigns for the BJP" .
He names among them the 2014 general election which swept Prime Minister Narendra Modi to power.
However both parties have denied any links with the company.
The
head of the BJP's social media unit Amit Malviya told the BBC that the
party had "not heard of SCL Group... so there is no question of us
working with them".
And the Congress party said it had never used SCL or any of its affiliate companies as it has its own data analytical team.
Media caption Mr
Nix spoke to BBC Newsnight before the Channel 4 report was aired on
Monday night. He declined to be interviewed after the undercover footage
was broadcast
Malaysia
In the
Channel 4 investigation, Malaysia was named as one of the countries in
which Cambridge Analytica had operated, sparking a huge national debate
ahead of a general election.
The company's website reportedly
stated that it supported Prime Minister Najib Razak's Barisan Nasional
(BN) coalition during generation election campaigning in Kedah state in
2013 "with a targeted messaging campaign highlighting their school
improvements".
Mr Najib and the BN strongly denied having used the company .
They said its advice was "provided personally" to Mukhriz Mahathir - he
was at that time part of BN and went on to be Kedah's chief minister.
Mr Mukhriz, in turn, denied this, but his former media manager has contradicted his denial.
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