ROME — The woman whose company was linked to thousands of pagers that exploded in Lebanon and Syria in an attack on Hezbollah this week has received unspecified ''threats'' in the days since and has been advised by the Hungarian secret services ''not to talk to media,'' her mother told The Associated Press on Friday.
Beatrix Bársony-Arcidiacono said by phone from Sicily that her daughter, Cristiana Bársony-Arcidiacono, ''is currently in a safe place protected by the Hungarian secret services'' after her Budapest-based company was linked to the devices used in the simultaneous pager attack on Tuesday.
Hungary's Special Service for National Security disputed the claim, though, saying the younger Bársony-Arcidiacono doesn't qualify for such protection but noting that she has been interviewed ''several times'' since an investigation was launched Wednesday.
''The results of the investigation so far have made it clear that the so-called pagers have never been on Hungarian territory, and that no Hungarian company or Hungarian expert was involved in their manufacture or modification!'' the agency told the AP in an email.
Cristiana Bársony-Arcidiacono hasn't appeared publicly since attacks Tuesday and Wednesday targeted pagers and then walkie-talkies in Lebanon, killing at least 37 people and wounding more than 3,000, including civilians. Hezbollah and the Lebanese government have blamed Israel, which has neither confirmed nor denied involvement.
Cristiana Bársony-Arcidiacono is listed as the CEO of Budapest-based BAC Consulting, which the Taiwanese trademark holder of the pagers said was responsible for the manufacture of the devices.
Her mother, though, told the AP that her daughter was ''not involved in any way'' in the deadly plot to turn the pagers into explosive devices, and that ''she was just a broker.''
"The items did not pass through Budapest. ... They were not produced in Hungary,'' she said, echoing a Hungarian government claim from earlier in the week.