Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Judgment a blow to ‘fascist forces’, says Congress

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Congress president Son ia Gandhi welcomed the judgment on right to privacy, saying it struck a blo wto the “unbridled encroachme­nt and surveillan­ce” by the state and its agencies in the life of common man.

Welcoming the judgment as a “victory” for every Indian, party vice-president Rahul Gandhi said the verdict “marks a major blow to fascist” forces. “A sound rejection of the BJP's ideology of suppressio­n through surveillan­ce,” he tweeted.

The ruling side also welcomed the verdict as a “positive developmen­t ”, with finance minister Arun Jaitley stating that the SC has accepted the government's “argument that privacy is a fundamenta­l right but it's not an absolute right”.

Jaitley blamed the previous UP A government for bringing the biometric ID card programme Aadhaar without a law or safeguards due to which individual privacy being a fundamenta­l right had to be settled by the Supreme Court.

“No safeguards were put by UP A as to how data would be protected or could be used. So people challenged it saying you are collecting data and what will you do with it, which are the privacy clauses in it and, therefore, the challenge was there,” he said.

Jaitley said the BJP-led NDA government, while framing the law for use of the biometric identifier, ensured all safeguards and that privacy as a fundamenta­l right is respected. “The ruling is positive because as the evolution of constituti­onal law goes on, there is always an effort to strengthen fundamenta­l rights .”

The attack by Gandhis on the N DA government is an indication that the Congress is going to make the verdict a talking point in the coming days and even try to corner the ruling side on the issue in the upcoming state elections.

Earlier at the party's media briefing, senior leader PC hi dambar am hailed the verdict as a landmark judgment and a setback to the Centre, which, he said, had maintained that there could be no fundamenta­l right to privacy. He said the verdict would rank among the most important judgments delivered by SC since the advent of the Constituti­on of India.

“Privacy is at the core of personal liberty. In fact, privacy is an inalienabl­e part of life itself. By virtue of the judgment, Article 21 has acquired new magnificen­ce ,” said Chidambara­m.

He said the most important fundamenta­l right of a citizen is embodied in Article 21 of the Constituti­on .“It is the right to life and liberty. Civilised societies will breathe meaning into that precious right and guard against any erosion of that right.”

The former finance minister critic is ed the Mo di government' s approach in its interpreta­tion of A ad ha ar under Article 21-- on the protection of life and personal liberty– and claimed its stand was inconsiste­nt.

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