Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

2 journalist­s move SC for inquiry into Pegasus row

- Abraham Thomas

THE JOURNALIST­S, N RAM AND SASHI KUMAR, SAID THE ALLEGED SNOOPING ‘PRIMA FACIE CONSTITUTE­S AN ACT OF CYBERTERRO­RISM’

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 Conwere gress 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

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. The three petitions have not been listed for a hearing or admitted by the top court yet. “Such mass surveillan­ce using a military-grade spyware abridges several fundamenta­l rights and appears to represent an attempt to infiltrate, attack and destabiliz­e independen­t institutio­ns that act as critical pillars of our democratic set-up,” the fresh petition filed by N Ram and Sashi Kumar through lawyer Shadan Farasat said.

It added that the alleged snooping has several “grave political and security ramificati­ons, especially considerin­g that the devices of government ministers, senior political figures and constituti­onal functionar­ies which may contain sensitive informatio­n have been targeted.”

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