Skip to main content
Best News Website or Mobile Service
WAN-IFRA Digital Media Awards Worldwide 2022
Best News Website or Mobile Service
Digital Media Awards Worldwide 2022
Hamburger Menu

Advertisement

Advertisement

World

The mystery woman whose company BAC Consulting is linked to exploding pagers

Cristiana Barsony-Arcidiacono is the owner of BAC Consulting - the Hungary-based company that licensed the pager design from Taiwan manufacturer Gold Apollo.

The mystery woman whose company BAC Consulting is linked to exploding pagers

An undated selfie of Cristiana Barsony-Arcidiacono, the CEO and owner of Hungary-based BAC Consulting in this picture obtained from social media; an office building where BAC Consulting is said to be registered, in Budapest. (Photos: Hungary Cristiana Barsony-Arcidiacono via Facebook; Marton Monus/REUTERS)

BUDAPEST: She speaks seven languages, has a PhD in particle physics, an apartment in Budapest plastered with her own pastel drawings of nudes, and a career that took her around Africa and Europe doing humanitarian work.

What Cristiana Barsony-Arcidiacono says she hasn't done is make the exploding pagers that killed 12 people and wounded more than 2,000 in Lebanon this week.

The 49-year-old Italian-Hungarian is the CEO and owner of BAC Consulting.

After her company was revealed to have licensed the design for the pagers from their original Taiwanese manufacturer Gold Apollo, Barsony-Arcidiacono told NBC News that she didn't make them.

"I am just the intermediate. I think you got it wrong," she said.

Founded in 2022, BAC Consulting is registered in the Hungarian capital Budapest. Barsony-Arcidiacono appears there as the only employee.

Questions have swirled over how or when the pagers were weaponised and remotely detonated, and the hunt for answers has involved Taiwan, Hungary, Bulgaria and Norway.

Elod Novak, member of the Committee on Defence and Law Enforcement, tries to get into the office building where BAC Consulting KFT is said to be registered, in Budapest, Hungary, Sep 18, 2024. (Photo: REUTERS/Marton Monus)

Since Tuesday's pager explosions, Barsony-Arcidiacono has not appeared in public.

Neighbours say they haven't seen her. She did not respond to messages seeking comment. Her flat in a stately old Budapest building, where a door to a vestibule had been open earlier in the week, has been shuttered.

Discussions with acquaintances and former work colleagues paint a picture of a woman with an impressive intellect, but a peripatetic career in a string of short-term jobs in which she never quite settled down, despite embellishing her CV along the way.

An acquaintance of hers, who like others who knew her socially in Budapest asked not to be identified, said she seemed like someone who "could easily be used".   

"Good-willed, not a business type, more like someone who often tries something new, who quickly believes things and then gets enthusiastic about that," the person said, adding that Barsony-Arcidiacono had been looking for income as she wanted to leave another job.

"ONE OF THE BIGGEST MISTAKES OF MY LIFE"

Kilian Kleinschmidt, a veteran ex-UN humanitarian administrator who hired Barsony-Arcidiacono in 2019 to run a six-month Dutch-funded programme to train Libyans in Tunisia in subjects such as hydroponics, IT and business development, described her as a "bullying" manager.

He said he released her before her contract was over.

"Cristiana. That was one of the biggest mistakes of my life, I think," Kleinschmidt told Reuters.

"It was simply awful on a personal level ... Then at some point, I said enough is enough. I should probably have done it sooner. I said that’s enough and I sent her home a month early."

Barsony-Arcidiacono has not responded to Reuters calls and emails. There was no answer when Reuters visited her private address in downtown Budapest.

At her Budapest home, a steel outer gate encloses a small vestibule where life drawings of nudes sketched in red and orange pastels can be seen taped up on the wall. An inner door leading into her apartment was ajar when Reuters first visited the building on Wednesday, and closed when the reporter returned on Thursday.

No one answered the bell.

A woman living in the building for the past two years said Barsony-Arcidiacono was already a resident when she moved in, and described her as kind, not loud, but communicative. 

She practised her drawing as part of a Budapest art club, although she hadn't attended for a couple of years, said the organiser of the group, who said she seemed like more of a businesswoman than an artist but was upbeat and outgoing.

A schoolmate of Barsony-Arcidiacono said she grew up in a family with a working father and housewife mother in Santa Venerina, near Catania in eastern Sicily, and attended high school nearby. He described her as a quite reserved youngster.

In the early 2000s, she earned her PhD in physics at University College London, where her dissertation on positrons - a subatomic particle with the mass of an electron and a positive charge - remains available on the UCL website. But she appears to have left without pursuing a scientific career.

"As far as I know she has not done scientific work since then," Akos Torok, a retired physicist who was one of her professors at UCL and published papers with her at the time, told Reuters by email.

A resume she used to get the job working for Kleinschmidt included references to other post-graduate degrees, in politics and development, from the London School of Economics and the School of Oriental and African Studies, which Reuters was not able to verify. She then went on to describe a string of jobs working on NGO projects in Europe, Africa and the Middle East.

In a separate CV on the BAC Consulting website, she described herself as a "Board Member at the Earth Child Institute", an educational and environmental charity in New York. The group's founder, Donna Goodman, told Reuters Barsony-Arcidiacono had never held any role there.

"She was a friend of a friend of a board member, and contacted us about a job opening" in 2018, Goodman said. "But she was never invited to apply."

That CV also described her as a former "Project Manager" at the International Atomic Energy Agency in 2008-2009, who organised a nuclear research conference. The IAEA said its records indicated she had been an intern there for eight months.

On BAC Consulting's website, which was taken down by the end of this week, the company gave little idea of its actual business in Hungary. Its registered address is a serviced office in a Budapest suburb.

"I am a scientist using my very diverse background to work on interdisciplinary projects for strategic decision-making(water & climate policy, investments)," Barsony-Arcidiacono wrote on her CV.

"With excellent analytical, language, and interpersonal skills, I enjoy working and leading in a multicultural environment where diversity, integrity and humour are valued."

"MODERN-DAY TROJAN HORSE"

The New York Times, citing three intelligence sources, said BAC was "part of an Israeli front" with at least two other shell companies created as well to mask the real identities of the people creating the pagers who were Israeli intelligence officers.

It described the pagers as a "modern-day Trojan Horse" after the wooden horse said to have been used by the Greeks to enter the city of Troy in the Trojan War.

According to authorities in Hungary, the devices in question have never been on Hungarian soil.

Bulgaria also became a focal point for investigations on Thursday after local media reported that Sofia-based Norta Global was involved in selling the pagers.

But Bulgaria's state security agency DANS said on Friday it had "indisputably established" that no pagers used in the Lebanon attack were imported to, exported from, or made in Bulgaria.

It said neither Norta nor its Norwegian owner had traded, sold or bought the pagers within Bulgaria's jurisdiction.

Source: Reuters/AFP/gs

Advertisement

Also worth reading

Advertisement