Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

SC has not lived up to its own principles in J&K

On the Internet’s centrality and State actions, the court’s vision is sound. But this did not get translated in its order

- Gautam Bhatia is a Delhi-based advocate The views expressed are personal GAUTAM BHATIA

In January, the Supreme Court (SC) handed down an important — but incomplete — judgment in Anuradha Bhasin vs Union of India, a case concerning the restoratio­n of Internet services in Jammu and Kashmir (J&K). It held that the right to access informatio­n through the Internet was a fundamenta­l right protected by the Constituti­on, that orders banning Internet services must be made public, that they must be proportion­ate (i.e., restrictin­g the Internet must be the “least restrictiv­e alternativ­e” available to the government), that they must be temporary, and reviewed on a regular basis. However, the Court did not actually examine the Kashmir Internet ban on the basis of these principles. Instead, it left that determinat­ion up to the government.

Nonetheles­s, and perhaps nudged by the principles set out in SC’s judgment, the government took some steps towards partial restoratio­n. By March 2020, 2G Internet was made available. At that point, however, the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) pandemic reached Indian shores, and a nationwide lockdown was announced to contain the spread of the virus. The effects of the lockdown highlighte­d even more starkly how indispensa­ble a functionin­g Internet is to modern life. For example, two of the most crucial spheres for dignified human existence — education and health — now had to be accessed through digital means.

In response to this, the Foundation for Media Profession­als (FMP) filed a fresh petition in SC, arguing that in view of the situation created by Covid-19, 4G Internet had to be restored in J&K. The government contested the petition, stating that restrictio­ns on 4G Internet were required to prevent the spread of inflammato­ry videos and photos from across the border. FMP responded by pointing out, first, that there was no evidence that showed a connection between restrictin­g the Internet and quelling the spread of propaganda. Indeed, available evidence demonstrat­ed the opposite: Effective Internet allowed the government to counter propaganda with as much speed and efficiency. Second, there were a host of other, less-restrictiv­e alternativ­es open to the government such as blocking specific websites, or temporaril­y restrictin­g the Internet in specific areas where there are credible threats of an attack — they were not resorted to. Most important, it was pointed out that restrictin­g Internet in all of J&K— where millions of people lived — during a pandemic effectivel­y involved punishing an entire population in response to the possibilit­y of cross-border propaganda.

SC then handed down its judgment in the 4G Internet case. Like in Anuradha Bhasin’s case, it laid down some important principles: It reiterated that the Internet restrictio­ns — even when necessary — had to be localised and temporary. It said that the principle of proportion­ality — with its focus on less-restrictiv­e alternativ­es — had to be adhered to. Unfortunat­ely, however, even after saying all of this, SC once again refused to assess the restrictio­ns on the touchstone of constituti­onal standards. Instead, it constitute­d yet another committee to review the restrictio­ns. But this committee was set up under the aegis of the ministry of home affairs (MHA), which was the body responsibl­e for imposing the restrictio­ns in the first place.

SC justified this decision by observing that in “ordinary times” the arguments of the petitioner­s would have had to be given serious considerat­ion, but that because of the threat of terrorism in Kashmir, special considerat­ions had to apply. This reasoning, however, is problemati­c. What it effectivel­y means — even though SC did not spell it out — is that at any given time, the people of J&K are not entitled to the same rights and freedoms that the Constituti­on grants to Indian citizens elsewhere. In other words, it is cross-border terrorism and Pakistan’s actions that determine the rights of the people of J&K, and not the Constituti­on — even though only recently, and with great fanfare, the Constituti­on had been “extended” to J&K after the effective abrogation of Article 370. And most disappoint­ing, SC continued to refuse to engage with the basic arguments that the Internet is an essential condition of human life that cannot be cut off by states at will, and that in any event, restrictin­g the Internet has no tangible impact on terrorism (Kashmir’s history — and events after the effective abrogation of Article 370 — will attest to this fact).

As raised by several people elsewhere, the continued treatment of Kashmir as a “special case” where a lower threshold of rights is justified, undermines the constituti­onal vision of equal protection and equal treatment. It is now to be hoped that when MHA committee considers the issue, the principles laid out by SC in both its judgments will be taken seriously, and 4G Internet restored promptly.

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The Constituti­on must be the threshold for rights in J&K, not Pakistan’s actions
HT ■ The Constituti­on must be the threshold for rights in J&K, not Pakistan’s actions
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