The Asian Age

Kerala Internet order a blow for freedom

-

Justice P.V. Asha of the Kerala high court advanced the cause of fundamenta­l human freedoms by seven league boots on Thursday, as she held that the right to have access to the Internet was a part of the fundamenta­l right to education as well as privacy under Article 21 of the Constituti­on. She struck down the hostel rules of a Kozhikode college which banned the use of mobile phones for girl students between 6 pm and 10 pm and prohibited the use of laptop computers in the hostel premises.

She cited in her ruling the UN Human Rights Council, according to which the right to Internet access “is a fundamenta­l freedom and a tool to ensure the right to education”.

She also cited the Supreme Court in Vishakha and Ors versus the State of Rajasthan and Ors (AIR 1997 SC 3011) wherein it was held that in light of Article 51(c) and Article 253 of the Constituti­on, and the role of the judiciary envisaged in the Beijing Statement (internatio­nal conference for the eliminatio­n of all forms of discrimina­tion against women, 1979), and observed that internatio­nal convention­s and norms must be read into the fundamenta­l rights in India “in the absence of enacted domestic law” in the field.

In the context of the hostel case before her, the judge noted the only restrictio­n to be imposed was that mobile phone use should not create a disturbanc­e for other students.

In 2016, the UN Human Rights Council had released a non-binding resolution condemning the “intentiona­l disruption” of Internet access by government­s.

Several government­s worldwide, in one form or another, either through outright enactment or judicial rulings, have lent their support to this important aspiration. India was not one of them. It remains to be seen if the Kerala high court order will override the “non-binding” aspect of the UNHRC resolution.

Even so, going by Article 19 of the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights, everyone has the right to freedom of opinion or expression, and this right includes “the freedom to seek, receive and impart informatio­n and ideas” through any means “regardless of frontiers”.

Indeed, the “right to the freedom to connect” and access the Internet has been held as a “fundamenta­l human right”.

In their eagerness to control, restrict and withhold channels of informatio­n and communicat­ions — as has happened in Kashmir recently —with the stated objective of subduing disorder and terrorist violence, government­s, as in China and now in the Valley, have deprived entire population­s of the “fundamenta­l human right” to the Internet. The Kerala judgment is a dampener in that regard.

It is yet to be seen if the authoritie­s in India will argue for a larger bench or a Constituti­on Bench of the Supreme Court to modify the order of the onejudge bench in Kerala, in light of its sweeping implicatio­ns for its policy of sustained repression in Kashmir.

Going by Article 19 of the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights, everyone has the right to freedom of opinion or expression, and this right includes ‘the freedom to seek, receive and impart informatio­n and ideas’ through any means ‘regardless of frontiers’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India