2 journalists move SC for probe into Pegasus row
NEW DELHI: Journalists N Ram and Sashi Kumar have approached the Supreme Court to seek an inquiry by a retired or sitting judge of the top court into the alleged surveillance of Indian citizens using Israeli Pegasus spyware and to identify the entities responsible for it.
In their petition, the two journalists said the allegations “prima facie constitute an act of cyber-terrorism” and asked the court to view the charges with seriousness since it impacts the right to privacy and free speech protected under the Constitution. The two journalists also said the government has not categorically ruled out obtaining Pegasus licences to conduct surveillance and sought a specific response from the Centre on this point. It also noted that no steps have been taken by the Centre to ensure a credible and independent investigation.
On Monday, the Mamata Banerjee-led Trinamool Congress government in West Bengal was the first state to appoint a commission of inquiry comprising former Supreme Court judge, justice (retd) MB Lokur and retired chief justice of Calcutta high court, justice (retd) Jyotirmay Bhattacharya to inquire into the row.
This is the third petition to be filed in the Supreme Court to seek a probe into the controversy over Pegasus software that erupted last Sunday after an international investigative consortium reported that phone numbers of many Indian ministers, politicians, activists, businessmen and journalists were among the 50,000 numbers that were potentially targeted worldwide by the NSO Group’s phone hacking software.
The government has denied the allegations in Parliament.
Communist Party of India (Marxist) member in the Rajya Sabha John Brittas and lawyer ML Sharma filed the other two petitions.