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The Supreme Court on Friday, 30 July, agreed to hear next week, the plea of veteran journalists N Ram and Sashi Kumar seeking a probe by a retired or a sitting Supreme Court judge into the Pegasus snooping matter.
The PIL was mentioned by senior advocate Kapil Sibal before the Chief Justice of India NV Ramana.
Sibal added, “This is an urgent matter. Making waves not just in India but internationally,” LiveLaw reported.
The CJI agreed to hear the matter next week.
The petitioners have pointed out that several of the phones belonging to the people whose names have appeared in the leaked database have been analysed and found to have been breached using Pegasus.
The petition also questioned whether such hacking represented an attempt by agencies and organisation 'to muzzle and chill the exercise of free speech and expression of dissent in India'.
"The Pegasus hack is a direct attack on communicational, intellectual and informational privacy, and critically endangers the meaningful exercise of privacy in these contexts. The right to privacy extends to use and control over one's mobile phone/electronic device and any interception by means of hacking/tapping is an infraction of Article 21. Further, the use of the Pegasus spyware to conduct surveillance represents a grossly disproportionate invasion of the right to privacy," the petition stated, according to LiveLaw.
A report published by an Indian online news portal on 18 July, revealed that Israel-made spyware Pegasus was believed to have been used to snoop on at least 300 Indian phone numbers, including those of over 40 senior journalists, Opposition leaders, government officials, and rights activists.
The leaked list of names was provided to The Wire and 15 other international news organisations by France-based media non-profit, Forbidden Stories, and Amnesty International, as part of a collaborative investigation called the 'Pegasus Project'.
The Indian government, on its part, has denied any role in the snooping operations, slamming the reports.
Meanwhile, the Israel-made spyware has stirred up a political storm, with several Opposition leaders protesting during the Monsoon Session of Parliament.
Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on 23 July had said that the prime minister and the home minister had used the Israeli weapon against the Indian state and its institutions.
(With inputs from LiveLaw)
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Published: 30 Jul 2021,12:04 PM IST