Deccan Chronicle

CENTRE: RIGHT TO LIFE ABOVE PRIVACY

- J. VENKATESAN | DC

New Delhi: The Centre on Wednesday told the Supreme Court that “there is a fundamenta­l right to privacy, but it is a wholly qualified right”. The apex court was hearing the Aadhaar card privacy issue. Attorney General K.K. Venugopal also argued that the right to life “transcends” the right to privacy.

The Centre on Wednesday asserted in the Supreme Court that the concept of privacy is a notional one and not a fundamenta­l right enshrined in the Constituti­on.

Attorney General K.K. Venugopal, making this submission before a ninejudge Constituti­on Bench comprising the Chief Justice J.S. Khehar and Justices J. Chelameswa­r, S.A. Bobde, R.K. Agrawal, Rohinton Nariman, A.M. Sapre, D.Y. Chandrachu­d, Sanjay Kishan Kaul and Abdul Nazeer said privacy is too vague to qualify as a fundamenta­l right.

The bench is examining whether right to privacy is a fundamenta­l right or not as two judgments of the apex court in 1954 and 1962 had held that it is not a fundamenta­l right.

The AG argued that there could be no independen­t right called right to privacy, and that privacy is only a sociologic­al notion, not a legal concept. “Every aspect of it does not qualify as a fundamenta­l right, as privacy also includes the subtext of liberty. No need to recognise privacy as an independen­t right. Defining the contours of privacy is not possible. Privacy is as good a notion as pursuit of happiness.”

He also argued that right to life “transcends” right to privacy.

The AG said, “If privacy were to be declared a fundamenta­l right, then it can be a qualified right.”

The Attorney General asked judges to state that only some aspects of privacy are fundamenta­l, not all, and it is a limited fundamenta­l right that can be taken away in legitimate state interest.

He said that in developing countries something as amorphous as privacy could not be a fundamenta­l right, that other fundamenta­l rights such as food, clothing, shelter etc. override the right to privacy.

The Attorney General made it clear that Right to Privacy cannot fall in the bracket of fundamenta­l rights as there are binding decisions of larger benches that it is only a common law right evolved through judicial pronouncem­ents.

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