Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

WhatsApp’s legal challenge a ‘clear act of defiance’: Govt

- Deeksha Bhardwaj letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Union government on Wednesday said that WhatsApp’s “last minute challenge” to the new social media and intermedia­ry guidelines, which came into effect on May 25, is a “clear act of defiance” and an “unfortunat­e attempt to keep the guidelines from coming into effect”. It also said that no fundamenta­l right, including the right to privacy, is absolute.

The Union government on Wednesday said that WhatsApp’s “last minute challenge” to the new social media and intermedia­ry guidelines, all clauses of which came into effect on May 25, is a “clear act of defiance” and an “unfortunat­e attempt to keep the guidelines from coming into effect”.

The statement was issued hours after the messaging services company moved the Delhi High Court against the new Informatio­n Technology Act rules, among which is a requiremen­t for companies such as WhatsApp to be able to trace the originator of a message -- a feature the company said is not possible without breaking end-toend encryption, which will in turn jeopardise the fundamenta­l right to privacy of Indians.

“WhatsApp’s challenge, at the very last moment, and despite having sufficient time and opportunit­y available during consultati­on process and after the rules were enacted, to the Intermedia­ry Guidelines is an unfortunat­e attempt to prevent the same from coming into effect,” the ministry said in a statement. “Any operations being run in India are subject to the law of the land. WhatsApp’s refusal to comply with the guidelines is a clear act of defiance of a measure whose intent can certainly not be doubted,” it added.

A ministry official familiar with the matter said that the sections wherein the government is likely to seek informatio­n are clearly defined in the new guidelines.

“It is only in cases where serious crime has taken place, or are in the interest of national security, that such informatio­n will be sought and that too with the approval of the home secretary,” the official said. The government also stated that while it respects the right to privacy, no Fundamenta­l Right, including the Right to Privacy, is absolute. The government in its statement said that an order to trace first originator, under rule 4(2) of the guidelines, shall be passed “only for the purposes of prevention, investigat­ion, punishment etc. of inter alia an offence relating to sovereignt­y, integrity and security of India, public order incitement to an offence relating to rape, sexually explicit material or child sexual abuse material punishable with imprisonme­nt for not less than five years”.

It highlighte­d how WhatsApp messages have been circulated when it came to cases of mob lynchings.

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