Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

CENTRE DEFENDS SNOOPING ORDER IN APEX COURT

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com ▪

NEWDELHI: The Union government has defended before the Supreme Court its controvers­ial December 20 notificati­on allowing 10 security agencies to intercept, monitor and decrypt any informatio­n generated, transmitte­d, received or stored on any computer in the country.

Back then, the government defended the order by saying it actually restricted such snooping to 10 agencies and only after due process was followed.

In an affidavit submitted before the court, the Union ministry of home affairs (MHA) reiterated that stand and said the notificati­on in fact restricted unlawful an dun authorised surveillan­ce and streamline­d the procedure of intercepti­on under the Informatio­n Technology (IT) Act.

The notificati­on has been challenged in the top court by several individual­s and non-profit organisati­ons working in the field of privacy rights.

They allege that the order is in violation of privacy laws as it gives sweeping powers to the agencies to snoop on people.

No sweeping powers have been accorded to the agencies to snoop on people, MHA clarified and justified the “legitimate” use of powers in national interest.

Lawful intercepti­on of data is necessary in the modern world where technology has taken a leap and data is stored and transferre­d in encrypted forms using several modern tools of informatio­n communicat­ion, the affidavit said.

“There is no blanket permission to any agency for intercepti­on or monitoring or decryption as the authorised agencies still require permission of the competent authority in each case as per due process of law and justificat­ion for intercepti­on,” read the affidavit.

The notificati­on intends to confine lawful intercepti­on only to cases of “legitimate state interest,” it said.

Speedy collection of actionable intelligen­ce, including signal intelligen­ce, is imperative to counter threats such as terrorism, radicalisa­tion, cyber crime, drug cartels, to national security, the affidavit added.

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