The Asian Age

Right to privacy is not absolute, observes SC

- J. VENKATESAN NEW DELHI, JULY 19

“Right to privacy” is not absolute and it can’t stop the legislatur­e from imposing reasonable restrictio­ns, the Supreme Court on Wednesday observed orally while taking up a batch of petitions challengin­g the constituti­onal validity of the Aadhaar scheme and claiming privacy as a fundamenta­l right.

A nine-judge Bench, including Chief Justice J.S. Khehar, is revisiting, after 55 years, two earlier judgments which held that “right to privacy” is not a fundamenta­l right.

While senior counsel Arvind P. Datar was making his submission, Justice Chandrachu­d said “right to privacy” can’t be defined by the court as its contours are amorphous.

The court asked the counsel, “Can this court define privacy? You can’t make a catalogue of what constitute­s privacy. Privacy is so amorphous and includes everything

You can’t make a catalogue of what constitute­s privacy. Privacy is so amorphous and includes everything from liberty, dignity, religion and free movement.

— Justice J. Chelameswa­r, SC judge

from liberty, dignity, religion and free movement.”

Justice Chandrachu­d told the counsel that “if we make any attempt to catalogue privacy, it will have disastrous consequenc­es. Privacy is a subsect of liberty and not necessaril­y co-exists with data protection”. The arguments will continue on Friday.

The court said, “Every fundamenta­l right can be subject to reasonable restrictio­ns under Article 19 (2) of the Constituti­on and the State is entitled to regulate the right,” he said.

Continued from Page 1 Citing examples, Justice Chandrachu­d said, “Right to make a decision will not come under privacy. If I decide to cohabit with my wife, police can’t barge into my bedroom. That’s my privacy.”

Senior counsel Gopal Subramaniu­m argued that privacy is a broader concept and data sharing is only one aspect of it. Privacy is about the freedom of thought, conscience and individual autonomy and none of the fundamenta­l rights can be exercised without assuming certain sense of privacy, he said. The State is under an affirmativ­e obligation to protect the fundamenta­l rights. Liberty is fundamenta­l to democracy and citizens cannot exist without privacy, he said.

Former attorney general Soli Sorabjee also said that privacy is not explicitly laid out in the Constituti­on. But that does not mean the right does not exist as it has be deduced from the Constituti­on. He argued that the freedom of press has been derived from Article 19, similarly, right to privacy can be derived broadly from Article 21.

When counsel Shyam Divan submitted that a person should have the right to “informatio­nal self-determinat­ion, Justice Chandrachu­d asked, “If people have put themselves in the public realm using technology, is that not a surrender of their right to privacy?”

“In the Internet age, a person should have control on how much he should put forward and not be compelled,” Mr Divan submitted.

He drew the court’s attention to the fact that Union finance minister Arun Jaitley, during a discussion in Rajya Sabha on Aadhaar Bill in March 2016, had said that right to privacy was a fundamenta­l right but now the same government is denying it.

Attorney general K.K. Venugopal earlier told the court that an eight-judge Bench in 1954 and a sixjudge Bench in 1962 had ruled that “right to privacy” was not a fundamenta­l right.

Thereafter, the apex court referred the matter to the nine-judge Constituti­on Bench which, apart from the CJI, includes Justices Chelameswa­r, S.A. Bobde, R.K. Agrawal, Rohinton Nariman, A.M. Sapre, Chandrachu­d, Sanjay Kishan Kaul and S. Abdul Nazeer

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India