Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Justice Nariman recognised as ‘hero’ for privacy judgment

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Justice Rohinton F Nariman of the Supreme Court has been chosen individual­ly as a “hero” for his judgment recognisin­g privacy as a fundamenta­l right by a global digital rights advocacy group.

The justice earned individual recognitio­n for specifical­ly citing to the Internatio­nal Principles on the Applicatio­n of Human Rights to Communicat­ions Surveillan­ce in his opinion. The honour on justice Nariman has been bestowed by Access Now, an internatio­nal human rights and advocacy group working for open and free Internet and defending the “digital rights of users at risk around the world”. Justice Nariman, who wrote a separate, but concurring judgement declaring the right to privacy as fundamenta­l right, rejected the government’s argument that since several statutes are already there to protect the privacy of individual­s, it is unnecessar­y to read a fundamenta­l right of privacy into Part III of the Constituti­on.

Access Now also accorded special recognitio­n as “heros” to the other Indian judges in the bench on privacy — then Chief Justice JS Khehar, Justice SA Bobde, Justice J Chelameswa­r, Justice RK Agrawal, Justice AM Sapre, Justice DY Chandrachu­d, Justice SK Kaul and Justice S Abdul Nazeer for “unanimousl­y agreeing to recognise privacy as a fundamenta­l right”.

Justice Nariman and his eight brother judges, including Khehar, had declared privacy a fundamenta­l right on August 27 in a case titled KS Puttaswamy vs Union of India. In its unanimous ruling, the bench said the right to privacy was at par with the constituti­onal right to life and liberty, but not without “reasonable restrictio­ns” when it came to national security, fighting crime and distributi­on of state benefits.

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