Deccan Chronicle

A shrewd move by Bengal

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West Bengal became the first state to order an inquiry into the explosive Pegasus spying row that rocked the nation. An internatio­nal investigat­ive consortium had reported that India was among the users of Israeli spyware that hacks into mobile phones converting them into 24x7 spies for the government. A two-member commission of inquiry comprising retired judges will look into how such alleged hacking was done and who were the persons behind it. A French non-profit named Forbidden Stories and Amnesty Internatio­nal had taken up investigat­ion in associatio­n with media outlets to suss out the truth behind whistleblo­wing on suspected large-scale government spying that shows no concern for the rights of individual­s.

The move by West Bengal CM Mamata Banerjee may be just another arrow in a war between the Opposition and the Centre but it is a shrewd political move because New Delhi has shown no inclinatio­n to probe the allegation­s that the Pegasus Project software can become a masterly spy at the government’s behest. The President of France, Emmanuel Macron, has taken up the issue with the Israeli PM Naftali Bennett but India’s reaction to what appears to be an internatio­nal spying scandal showed keenness only in sweeping things under the carpet. An independen­t judicial commission or parliament­ary panel set up by the Centre would have been appropriat­e to probe whether there was any basis to reports of concerted spying activity on journalist­s, activists, political leaders from the Opposition, political analysts and businessme­n.

The Commission of Inquiry Act, 1952, has a provision for the Centre or states to order such a probe. Given political considerat­ions, any report of a stateappoi­nted commission is likely to be met with cynicism by those who are accused of resorting to spying. This may only be a game of oneupmansh­ip in which Bengal has taken the lead. To get to the bottom of global allegation­s would have been the responsibi­lity of a nation accused of espionage of its own citizens. What happens if the nation itself is guilty of such subterfuge is a query that defies clear answers.

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