Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

FORMER TRIPURA PWD MINISTER ARRESTED

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AGARTALA: Communist Party of India (Marxist) central committee member Badal Chowdhury, accused of being involved in a ~630 crore scam that allegedly took place during his tenure as the PWD minister during the Left Front rule in Tripura, has been arrested, police said on Tuesday. West Tripura district Superinten­dent of Police Manik Das said that Chowdhury was arrested on Monday night. He was absconding after a local court denied him anticipato­ry bail on Wednesday.

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Tuesday transferre­d to itself all cases related to the linkage of social media profiles with Aadhaar pending in different high courts in the country and also asked the Centre to submit its report in January to check social media misuse.

A bench of justices Deepak Gupta and Aniruddha Bose, while allowing the transfer petition of Facebook, asked the registry to place all connected matters before the Chief Justice of India for listing before an appropriat­e bench in the last week of January 2020.

The top court also asked the Centre to submit its report in January on the notificati­on of rules by which social media misuse can be checked and liability could be fastened on intermedia­ries to decrypt messages.

The bench’s order came after Attorney General KK Venugopal, appearing for Tamil Nadu, dropped his opposition to Facebook’s plea seeking transfer of all cases pending in different high courts to the apex court.

Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, appearing for the Centre, clarified that its is not a ploy to breach the privacy of individual­s but it is an attempt to protect national security and sovereignt­y.

The attorney general then intervened and said a terrorist cannot claim his right to privacy.

Mehta also rubbished the claim of some petitioner­s, who alleged that the draft rule under considerat­ion of the government, which would enable authoritie­s to fasten liability on intermedia­ries to trace the originator of a particular message or a content, is government’s ploy to “trample individual’s privacy”.

On Monday, the Centre had told the court that internet has emerged as a potent tool to cause “unimaginab­le disruption” to democratic polity, and sought three more months for finalising and notifying the rules that would regulate the functionin­g of social media intermedia­ries in the country.

The Ministry of Electronic­s and Informatio­n Technology (Meity) had told the top court that though technology had led to economic growth and societal developmen­t, there was also an exponentia­l rise in hate speech, fake news and anti-national activities.

The court had taken the affidavit on record after counsel representi­ng the Centre said the government had sought three months’ time for finalisati­on of the Informatio­n Technology Intermedia­ries Guidelines (Amendment) Rules, 2018.

The affidavit had stated that after collating and analysing all the details as had emerged from the stakeholde­rs’ participat­ion and inter-ministeria­l consultati­on, “the deponent (Meity) has bona fide belief that a further period of three months would be required for finalising and notifying the final revised rules in accordance with law”.

It had also said that in the last few years, there was an enormous increase in the use of social media and with lower internet tariffs, availabili­ty of smart devices and last-mile connectivi­ty, more and more people in India were becoming part of the internet or social media platforms.

On September 24, the top court had observed that technology had taken a “dangerous turn” and asked the Centre to apprise it within three weeks about the time-frame needed to come up with guidelines to curb misuse of social media in the country.

Expressing serious concern over some social media platforms not being able to trace the originator of a message or an online content, the apex court had said the government must step in now.

Seeking transfer of the cases to the top court, Facebook Inc. had contended that whether service providers could be asked to share data with probe agencies to help them in criminal investigat­ion needed to be decided by the apex court as it would have a global effect.

The social media giant had pointed out that there were four petitions — two in the Madras High Court, one in the Bombay High Court and one in the Madhya Pradesh High Court — and that they contained almost similar prayers.

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