City
Epaper

Plea in SC seeks court-monitored SIT probe into Pegasus snooping scandal

By IANS | Updated: July 22, 2021 15:10 IST

New Delhi, July 22 A plea has been moved in the Supreme Court seeking a court-monitored SIT probe ...

Open in App

New Delhi, July 22 A plea has been moved in the Supreme Court seeking a court-monitored SIT probe into the Pegasus snooping scandal. The plea filed by advocate M.L. Sharma has claimed that the snooping scandal is an attack on the Indian democracy and the Supreme Court could force the government to come clean on the issue of the use of Pegasus in India or the existence of NSO contracts.

The plea said: "The Pegasus scandal is a matter of grave concern and an attack on the Indian democracy, country's security and judiciary. The widespread use of surveillance is morally disfiguring. National security implications of this software are huge".

Insisting for a court-monitored probe, the plea contended that the scandal involves issues concerning national security and judicial independence.

"Using of Pegasus software for snooping of opposition leaders, political persons, judges of the judiciary, even any Individuals is a serious offence under Information of Technology Act 2000 r.w. the Official secret Acts of 2013", said the plea.

The plea argued that it is a question whether buying of Pegasus software by the Central government violates Articles 266(3), 267(2) and 283(2) of the Indian Constitution. The plea further contended that whether it attracts the rigours of sections 408, 409 and 120-B of the Indian Penal Code.

Sharma's PIL lists Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi and the CBI as the respondents and Pegasus purchase from state fund without Parliament permission is a serious violation of the Constitution. The plea questioned whether the Constitution allows the Prime Minister and his ministers to snoop on citizens of India for their vested political interest?

The plea further queried, "Whether snooping of common citizens of India, opposition leaders, judges of the judiciary and others do not attract an offence S.3 of the O.S. Act of 1923 as well as u/s 65, 66 & 72 of the Information technology act 2000 coupled with Violation of Art 21?"

Pegasus software made by the Israeli firm NSO Group, can infect smartphones without users' knowledge and access virtually all their data.

According to a news report, the woman staffer who made sexual harassment allegations against the former Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi and some of her family members were on the list, as the potential targets of Pegasus snooping.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: indiaNew DelhiSupreme CourtRanjan GogoiPegasusThe new delhi municipal councilDelhi south-westIndiUk-indiaRepublic of india
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalOperation Sindhu: “We Saw Drones, Missiles,” Say Evacuated Students Recounting Life in Iran’s Warzone

NationalSupreme Court Issues Notice to Bihar and Delhi Governments Over Minor Girl's Plea Against Forced Child Marriage

NationalCOVID-19 Update: Mumbai Cases Drop Sharply; India’s Active Tally Drops By 428

CricketIndia vs India A Intra-Squad LIVE Streaming: When and Where To Watch Intra-Squad Match on TV and Online?

Navi MumbaiNavi Mumbai News: Border Crackdown Forces Indian Woman to Part With Children and Husband Amid Citizenship Chaos

International Realted Stories

InternationalSpaceX Starship 36 Explodes During Static Fire Test (Watch Video)

InternationalPM Modi gifts silver candlestand to Croatian counterpart Plenkovic, Pattachitra painting to President Milanovic

International"Gen Asim Munir can not be trusted", says former US Envoy Zalmay Khalilzad

InternationalBilingual website dedicated to 14th Dalai Lama's 90th b'day celebration innagurated

InternationalEfforts continue for safe return of Indian nationals from Iran: Kirti Vardhan Singh