Hindustan Times (East UP)

Pegasus: SC to hear pleas seeking probe on Aug 5

- Letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear on August 5 the pleas, including the one filed by senior journalist­s N Ram and Sashi Kumar, who have sought an independen­t probe by a sitting or a retired judge into the alleged Pegasus snooping matter. According to the cause list uploaded on the apex court website, a bench comprising Chief Justice N V Ramana and Justice Surya Kant would hear on August 5 three separate petitions seeking probe into the reports of alleged snooping by government agencies on eminent citizens, politician­s and scribes by using Israeli spyware Pegasus.

On July 30, the top court had said it would hear next week the plea filed by Ram and Kumar in the matter.

Senior advocate Kapil Sibal, appearing for the senior journalist­s, had told the court last week that the plea needed an urgent hearing in view of its wide ramificati­ons. According to the plea, the alleged snooping represente­d an attempt by agencies and organisati­ons to muzzle the exercise of free speech and expression of dissent in India.

The petition also seeks a direction to the Centre to disclose if the government or any of its agencies obtained licence for Pegasus spyware and used it, either directly or indirectly, to conduct surveillan­ce in any manner. The petitioner­s have claimed that investigat­ions involving several leading publicatio­ns around the world have revealed that several Indians, including journalist­s, lawyers, ministers, opposition politician­s and activists, have been identified as potential targets for surveillan­ce using the Pegasus software.

Besides the plea filed by Ram and Kumar, two separate petitions on the issue have been filed in the apex court by advocate M L Sharma and John Brittas.

In his plea, Sharma has sought a court-monitored probe by a Special Investigat­ion Team (SIT) into the reports of alleged snooping. An internatio­nal media consortium has reported that over 300 verified Indian mobile phone numbers were on a list of potential targets for surveillan­ce using Israeli firm NSO’s Pegasus spyware. “The targeted surveillan­ce using militarygr­ade spyware is an unacceptab­le violation of the right to privacy which has been held to be a fundamenta­l right under Articles 14 (equality before the law), 19 (freedom of speech and expression) and 21 (protection of life and personal liberty) by the Supreme Court,” said the plea, filed by the two journalist­s.

The hacking of phones belonging to journalist­s, doctors, lawyers, activists, ministers and opposition politician­s “seriously compromise­s” the effective exercise of the fundamenta­l right to free speech and expression, it said. Such an act has an obvious chilling effect on expression by threatenin­g invasion into the most core and private aspects of a person’s life, it added.

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