Skip to content
The Nexus
DossierENTITY

National Intelligence Service

Coverage of National Intelligence Service in the Nexus archive.

Earliest in view: Jun 2 · 15:53 UTCMost recent: Jul 10 · 05:34 UTC
Co-mentioned in this coverage
Recent coverage
  • SECURITYJul 10 · 05:34 UTCALLAFRICA
    Nigeria: Nigeria Suspends Third-Party Services for Visa Applicants in the U.S.

    Nigeria has suspended third-party services for visa applicants in the U.S. The National Intelligence Service (NIS) did not provide a reason for the suspension or specify when the arrangement might be reviewed.

  • SECURITYJul 1 · 13:12 UTCNY POST
    US-based ‘Amazon of South Korea’ forced to recover laptop from bottom of Chinese river in bizarre data privacy clampdown: report

    A Coupang representative traveled to Shanghai to retrieve a desktop PC, hard drives, and other items from a suspect, but the National Intelligence Service (NIS) later required the company to recover a missing laptop. The incident involves a data privacy clampdown linked to a signed confession and recovered hardware.

  • SECURITYJun 29 · 10:42 UTCALLAFRICA
    Malawi: Ex-Spy Chief Dokani Refuses to Testify in Chilima Crash Probe

    Former National Intelligence Service director general Dokani Ngwira refused to testify in the Chilima crash probe. His testimony before the Parliamentary Ad Hoc Committee was halted due to concerns over classified information.

  • SECURITYJun 26 · 05:22 UTCMIDDLE EAST EYE
    South Korean president says three more ships to leave Hormuz over weekend

    South Korean President Lee Jae Myung announced that three more ships will leave the Strait of Hormuz over the weekend, reducing the number of trapped South Korean cargo ships to five. The ships were detained after Iran closed the strait following the US-Israel war with Iran. The president credited government agencies for their efforts in securing the ships' release.

  • SECURITYJun 2 · 15:53 UTCWTOP DC
    Bahrain spy agency officer is sentenced to life over in-custody death

    A Bahraini National Intelligence Service officer was sentenced to life in prison for the in-custody death of 32-year-old Shiite Muslim Mohamed al-Mousawi, whose injuries were consistent with torture. The case occurred amid protests linked to the Iran war, with the government accusing Shiite protesters of being Iranian proxies, while rights groups criticized the arrest campaign and demanded transparency.

National Intelligence Service · Dossier · The Nexus