Khaleej Times

Govt authorises 10 agencies to snoop on any computer

-

new delhi — In a decision with wide ramificati­ons, the government has allowed 10 intelligen­ce and investigat­ing agencies and the Delhi Police to intercept, monitor and decrypt “any informatio­n” generated, transmitte­d, received or stored in “any computer”, an action that has come under attack from opposition parties.

“In exercise of the powers conferred by sub-section (1) of Section 69 of the Informatio­n Technology Act, 2000 (21 of 2000) read with rule 4 of the Informatio­n Technology (Procedure and Safeguards for Intercepti­on, Monitoring and Decryption of Informatio­n) Rules, 2009, the competent authority hereby authorises the following security and intelligen­ce agencies for the purposes of intercepti­on, monitoring and decryption of any informatio­n generated, transmitte­d, received or stored in any computer resource under the said act,” an order issued by Home Secretary Rajiv Gauba said.

The 10 agencies are Intelligen­ce Bureau, National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA), Enforcemen­t Directorat­e (ED), Central Bureau of Investigat­ion

(CBI), Narcotics Control Board, Central Board of Direct Taxes, Directorat­e of Revenue Intelligen­ce, Cabinet Secretary (RAW), Directorat­e of Signal Intelligen­ce (for service areas of Jammu and Kashmir, Northeast and Assam only) and Commission­er of Police, Delhi.

The notificati­on made it clear

that any subscriber or service provider person in charge of any computer resource is bound to extend all facilities and technical assistance to these agencies.

In case any person or entity refuses to cooperate, it “will face seven years in jail and a fine”.

The order has come under attack from Congress and other parties.

Congress spokespers­on Randeep Surjewala tweeted: “This time, attack on privacy”.

“Modi Govt mocks and flouts Fundamenta­l ‘Right to Privacy’ with brazen impunity! Having lost elections, now wants to scan/snoop your computers? ‘Big Brother Syndrome’ is truly embedded in NDA’s DNA!,” tweeted Surjewala.

“The sweeping powers given to agencies to snoop phone calls and computers without any checks and balances is extremely worrisome. This is likely to be misused.

“The Government order giving a blanket approval to electronic surveillan­ce is a direct assault on civil liberties and personal freedom of citizens,” he tweeted,” Ahmed Patel tweeted.

AIMIM and Lok Sabha member, Asaduddin Owaisi, said: “Modi has used a simple government order to permit our national agencies to snoop on our communicat­ions. Who knew that this is what they meant when they said ‘ghar ghar Modi’.

“George Orwell’s Big Brother is here and welcome to 1984,” he had tweeted late on Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates