Deccan Chronicle

No mobiles at Cabinet meet

Centre’s bid to stem leaks during briefing of ministers

- DC CORRESPOND­ENT NEW DELHI, OCT. 20

In a move to prevent leakage of sensitive informatio­n on important policy matters and decisions, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has issued a directive to his ministers not to carry smartphone­s and other mobile phones to Cabinet meetings. The government also fears the possibilit­y of the devices being hacked.

It may be noted that mobile phones are already banned at Cabinet meetings in Britain.

This is the first time the Indian government has decided to take such a step. The government recently issued a circular (that is in this newspaper’s possession) stating: “It has been decided that smartphone­s/mobile phones henceforth will not be permitted inside meeting venues of Cabinet/Cabinet committees."

The Cabinet Secretaria­t issued the circular to the private secretarie­s of all ministers, directing them to brief their ministers “appropriat­ely” that smartphone­s and mobile phones will not be permitted at meetings. The directive comes at a time when there are heightened threats of data theft in the aftermath of the surgical strikes by the Army across the LoC on terror launchpads located there.

Highly-placed sources said the decision by the Prime Minister’s Office appears to have been driven by recent security inputs indicating smartphone­s could be used for recording, and prone to hacking by external agencies. The intelligen­ce and security agencies also warned that Pakistani or Chinese hackers could target ministers and officials.

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