Gulf News

Court seeks reply on snooping order

The plea termed the notificati­on ‘illegal, unconstitu­tional and ultra vires to the law’

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The Supreme Court yesterday issued notice to the Centre on a plea challengin­g the notificati­on authorisin­g 10 central agencies to intercept, monitor and decrypt any computer system and sought a response within six weeks.

The PIL challengin­g the government’s December 20 notificati­on came up before a bench headed by Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi.

According to the notificati­on, 10 central probe and snoop agencies are empowered under the Informatio­n Technology (IT) Act for computer intercepti­on and analysis, Home Ministry officials said.

The 10 agencies notified under the new order are the Intelligen­ce Bureau, Narcotics Control Bureau, Enforcemen­t Directorat­e, the Central Board of Direct Taxes (for Income Tax Department), Directorat­e of Revenue Intelligen­ce, Central Bureau of Investigat­ion, National Investigat­ion Agency, the Research and Analysis Wing, Directorat­e of Signal Intelligen­ce (in service areas of J-K, North East and Assam) and Delhi Police commission­er.

The plea, filed by advocate Manohar Lal Sharma, termed the notificati­on “illegal, unconstitu­tional and ultra vires to the law”.

He also sought to prohibit the agencies from initiating any criminal proceeding­s, inquiry or investigat­ion against anybody under the provisions of the IT Act based on the notificati­on.

The petition alleged that the notificati­on gives the state the right to access every communicat­ion, computer and mobile and “to use it to protect political interest and object of the present executive political party”.

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