A top Facebook executive got grilled Thursday by British lawmakers, who angrily demanded answers about the company’s data leak scandal.

At a hearing before Parliament’s Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee, MP Julian Knight told the tech exec that the social network is “a morality-free zone destructive to a fundamental right of privacy.”

Facebook has faced barbs since it was revealed that it leaked the private information of nearly 90 million users without their permission to Cambridge Analytica, a political research firm affiliated with Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign.

“You aren’t an innocent party wronged by the likes of Cambridge Analytica,” the lawmaker told Facebook chief technology officer Mike Schroepfer. “Your company is the problem.”

When asked why Mark Zuckerberg did not make the trip to London himself — despite written requests from British lawmakers for him to appear before them — Schroepfer said the CEO was “trying to dedicate his time, in the office, to solving these problems.”

Schroepfer was also grilled about Facebook’s legal threats against the Observer when they found out the paper was investigating Cambridge Analytica.

He initially said Facebook believed it to be “common practice” to make legal threats before a story is published to make sure facts are straight, but faced repeated pushback from the lawmakers.

“I am sorry that journalists feel that they’re being threatened,” he conceded. “I am sorry.”

The scandal had no discernible impact on the company’s business. Facebook had a strong earnings report Wednesday, raking in nearly $12 billion in revenue.

Facebook shares were up as much as 9.6 percent early Thursday afternoon.