Hindustan Times (East UP)

Centre seeks time to file 2nd affidavit in SC

Solicitor general Mehta requests for more time to file another affidavit, says could not consult the concerned officers

- Utkarsh Anand letters@hindustant­imes.com

SENIOR ADVOCATE KAPIL SIBAL, APPEARING IN THE PETITION FILED BY N RAM AND SASHI KUMAR, SAID THAT THERE WAS NO OBJECTION IF THE GOVERNMENT IS RECONSIDER­ING PREVIOUS STAND

NEW DELHI: The Union government on Tuesday signalled a rethink of its previous stand against filing a detailed response in the Supreme Court on a clutch of petitions demanding a courtmonit­ored probe into the alleged surveillan­ce of Indian citizens using Pegasus spyware. This came on a day the apex court was expected to pass orders on the constituti­on of a committee and other ancillary issues related to an independen­t inquiry.

On August 17, the Centre told the top court that it has nothing to add to its three-page affidavit on the Pegasus snooping matter which neither confirmed nor denied the use of the military grade spyware to hack phones of ministers, politician­s, businessme­n, activists and journalist­s. Following this, the bench, headed by Chief Justice of India NV Ramana, said it would consider passing some orders on constituti­on of expert committee at the next date of hearing.

But on Monday, solicitor general Tushar Mehta told the bench, which also included justices Surya Kant and AS Bopanna, that the government is yet to take a final call on filing the second affidavit, as suggested by the court earlier. When the matter was taken up, Mehta, representi­ng the Union government, submitted that there is some difficulty in a decision on the additional affidavit since he could not consult the officers concerned. “There is some difficulty regarding a call on filing the second affidavit. Please, consider accommodat­ing me till Thursday or Monday”, the S-G requested the bench.

To this, the CJI said: “But you have already filed an affidavit.”

Mehta replied: “Yes, my lords. We filed one affidavit and this court had enquired if we wanted to file another one. I could not ensure that stand. For some reason, some officers were not there; then I could not meet, etc. It (the stand) could not be found.” The SG requested adjourning the matter till Thursday or till next Monday .

Senior Advocate Kapil Sibal, appearing in the petition filed by journalist­s N Ram and Sashi Kumar, said that there was no objection if the government is reconsider­ing previous stand on filing comprehens­ive affidavit.

Accordingl­y, the matter was adjourned to September 13.

The Pegasus row erupted on July 18 after an internatio­nal investigat­ive consortium reported that the phones of Indian ministers, politician­s, activists, businessme­n and journalist­s were among the 50,000 that were potentiall­y targeted by Pegasus, Israeli company NSO Group’s phone hacking software. According to this consortium, Pegasus can switch on a target’s phone camera and microphone, as well as access data on the device, effectivel­y turning a phone into a pocket spy. Responding to a bunch of petitions filed by lawyers, politician­s, journalist­s and civil rights activists, the Union ministry of electronic­s and informatio­n technology filed the three-page affidavit on August 16 that refused to confirm or deny whether it used the Israeli Pegasus spyware for surveillin­g Indians. The Centre instead offered to set up an expert committee to look into controvers­y and “dispel any wrong narrative spread by certain vested interests”.

The bench tried to know whether the government would come clean on the purchase or use of Pegasus but the S-G consistent­ly maintained that a committee should rather be allowed to delve into the issue.

The case was adjourned by a day on August 16 to enable the government to decide on filing a comprehens­ive reply.

On August 17, the court observed that it is “not averse” to setting up an expert committee to look into the alleged surveillan­ce of Indian citizens with Pegasus spyware but expects the government to bring sufficient facts on record regarding the intercepti­on regime in India.

The government, however, replied that any disclosure on its using or not using Pegasus spyware would come at the cost of national security and insisted that it will divulge such informatio­n only before the proposed committee, which, it said, can report to the top court.

It also added that all intercepti­ons were being done in accordance with the statutory procedure, and it would not wish to put out in the public domain details of the software used for lawful surveillan­ce by filing any additional affidavit.

Following the Centre’s refusal, the court on August 17 issued a formal notice to the government on the batch of pleas filed by petitioner­s in the case, a list that includes advocate ML Sharma, former minister Yashwant Sinha, Rajya Sabha MP John Brittas, the Editors Guild of India, journalist­s N Ram and Sashi Kumar, journalist­s Paranjoy Guha Thakurta, Rupesh Kumar Singh, Ipshita Shatakshi, SNM Abdi, and Prem Shankar Jha, and civil rights activists Jagdeep S Chhokar and Narendra Mishra.

Deferring the matter for August 17, the bench once again asked S-G Mehta to consider filing a detailed reply while observing that the court would ponder over the future course of action in the meantime.

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