Business Standard

Judgment a big positive: FM

But Congress terms it a blow to ‘fascist’ forces

- ARCHIS MOHAN

At 11 am on Tuesday, the Supreme Court (SC) quashed instant triple talaq as unconstitu­tional. At 12.35 pm, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) chief Amit Shah tweeted his detailed statement welcoming the judgment. Prime Minister (PM) Narendra Modi, ministers, BJP chief ministers and party spokespers­ons swarmed social media and television channels to term the verdict “historic”. But 48 hours can be a long time in politics. At 10.45 am on Thursday, a nine-judge Bench of the SC announced its unanimous decision, declaring the right to privacy a fundamenta­l right.

Not even one BJP leader, let alone party chief Shah, commented on the verdict on social media or was willing to speak to newspapers and television channels till evening. None of the BJP spokespers­ons at its national headquarte­rs at 11 Ashoka Road was willing to comment on the issue. From the side of the government, it was left to Informatio­n Technology and Law Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad to address the media and field questions at 3.30 pm. Prasad claimed the government has been consistent­ly of the view that the right to privacy should be a fundamenta­l right.

Later in the evening, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said the SC judgment has accepted privacy as a fundamenta­l right but not as an absolute right, and that the judgment is a positive developmen­t for Aadhaar. The Congress national headquarte­rs at 24 Akbar Road buzzed with activity. A little after 100 minutes of the nine-member Bench delivering its verdict, senior Congress leader P Chidambara­m held a press conference.

“Today, we can once again celebrate our freedom. Tomorrow, there will be other challenges, other questions, and other attempts to invade the right to privacy. We shall overcome those challenges too,” Chidambara­m said.

Chidambara­m, a lawyer, termed the Modi government’s approach in its interpreta­tion of Aadhaar under Article 21, on the protection of life and personal liberty, as “inconsiste­nt”.

Chidambara­m said the Congress-led United Progressiv­e Alliance had conceived Aadhaar as an administra­tive tool to ensure that benefits of government welfare schemes reached their targeted people, and there were no leakages or duplicatio­n. He said the fault was not with the Aadhaar concept, but with the Modi government’s “use and misuse” of Aadhaar as a tool. West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, the Communist Party of India (Marxist), Congress President Sonia Gandhi and party Vice-President Rahul Gandhi also either tweeted their reactions or issued statements by 2 pm. The Congress Vice-President tweeted at 1.46 pm: “The SC decision marked a major blow to fascist forces. A sound rejection of the BJP’s ideology of suppressio­n through surveillan­ce.”

In her statement, Congress President Sonia Gandhi said the SC verdict on right to privacy strikes at “unbridled encroachme­nt and surveillan­ce” by the state and its agencies on the life of the common man. She said the Congress and Opposition together spoke for the right to privacy against “arrogant” attempts of the BJP government to curtail them.

To Prasad’s claim that the government has consistent­ly maintained that right to privacy should be a fundamenta­l right, CPI(M) chief Sitaram Yechury tweeted: “The ridiculous­ness of this government’s attempted U-turn on the right to privacy is amplified by Modi-Shah silence.” Yechury asked whether, as in the instant triple talaq case, “When will we see Shah credit Modi for right to privacy acknowledg­ed as a fundamenta­l right?” and ended his tweet with hashtag ‘post truth’.

BJP chief Amit Shah tweeted a link to his blog on the issue at 8.12 pm. This was in contrast from Tuesday when Shah had tweeted a detailed statement on the quashing of instant triple talaq by 12.35 pm, and had followed it up with a series of tweets and a video clip of welcoming the verdict. In his tweet at 1.45 pm on triple talaq verdict, PM had welcomed the judgment as historic. There was no statement yet from the Prime Minister’s Office on Thursday’s apex court verdict at the time of filing of this report. In his blog, Shah welcomed the SC judgment “as it strengthen­s the fundamenta­l rights and personal liberty”. Shah said: “Our government is committed to ensuring equitable social delivery, particular­ly to the poor in consonance” with the apex court judgment.

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