The Asian Age

Govt: Privacy too vague to be a right

- J. VENKATESAN

The Centre on Wednesday asserted in the Supreme Court that the concept of privacy is too vague to qualify as a fundamenta­l right. Attorney general K.K. Venugopal, making this submission before a ninejudge bench, said, “Defining the contours of privacy is not possible. Privacy is as good a notion as pursuit of happiness.”

The nine-judge Constituti­on bench is examining whether right to privacy is a fundamenta­l right or not in a case that could have implicatio­ns for Aadhaar.

Two judgments of the apex court, in 1954 and 1962, have held that privacy is not a fundamenta­l right.

The AG argued that there could be no independen­t right called right to privacy as privacy is a sociologic­al notion, not a legal concept.

“Every aspect of it does not qualify as a fundamenta­l right, as privacy also includes the subtext of liberty. No need to recognise privacy as an independen­t right… If privacy were to be declared a fundamenta­l right, then it can be a qualified right,” he said. And since only some aspects of privacy are

Continued from Page 1 fundamenta­l, Mr Venugopal submitted that in legitimate state interest this limited fundamenta­l right can be taken away.

Reiteratin­g that in developing countries something as amorphous as privacy could not be a fundamenta­l right that overrides other fundamenta­l rights such as to food, clothing, shelter etc., he submitted that the World Bank has said that identity system should be followed by every developing country.

“We can’t say every encroachme­nt of privacy is to be elevated to fundamenta­l right. The claim to liberty has to subordinat­e itself to right to life of others,” Mr Venugopal said.

Earlier in the day, senior counsel Kapil Sibal, appearing for four non-BJP ruled states — Karnataka, West Bengal, Punjab and Union Territory of Puducherry — said that in light of technologi­cal advancemen­t, the court needs to take a fresh look at right to privacy and its contours in the modern world.

“Privacy cannot be an absolute right, but it is a fundamenta­l right. This court needs to strike a balance,” he said.

Mr Sibal asked the apex court to address the issue of privacy afresh, and not from the prism of an era where issues confrontin­g contempora­ry society did not exist.

He said the right to privacy as an inalienabl­e natural right is based on the classic premise of the individual’s wish to be let alone. However, the contours of the right needs to be understood with changing times. Rapid advances in science and technology pose considerab­le challenges in delineatin­g the exact contours of the right.

Mr Sibal argued that privacy is a right which protects the inner sphere of the individual from interferen­ce of state and non-state actors and allows the individual to make autonomous life choices regarding the constructi­on of her identity, not only in seclusion from others but in the personal, familial, and social. With advances in technology, the state in the 21st century is far more powerful than it ever was, and is capable of entering a citizens house without knocking at his/her door. Evolution of technology has facilitate­d easy intrusion into the life of individual­s by state and non-state actors, he said. Arguments will continue on Thursday.

 ??  ?? Samajwadi Party president Akhilesh Yadav (right) with party leader Azam Khan at Vidhan Sabha in Lucknow on Wednesday. —
Samajwadi Party president Akhilesh Yadav (right) with party leader Azam Khan at Vidhan Sabha in Lucknow on Wednesday. —

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