City
Epaper

Comply with SC order on removing deceased’s identity in Kolkata case: Centre to social media firms

By IANS | Updated: August 21, 2024 18:30 IST

New Delhi, Aug 21 The Centre on Wednesday directed social media platforms operating in the country to comply ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Aug 21 The Centre on Wednesday directed social media platforms operating in the country to comply with the Supreme Court order to remove the deceased's identity in the RG Kar Medical College incident, or else face regulatory action.

The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) said that prompt removal required all references including the name, photographs, and video clips depicting the deceased, from all social media platforms and electronic media.

MeitY also asked social media platforms to inform about the action taken in response to the compliance of the Supreme Court order. It also urged all social media companies to ensure that such sensitive information is not further disseminated. “Failure to comply with the Supreme Court’s order may result in legal consequences and further regulatory action,” said the ministry.

In its order dated August 20, the apex court had directed that all references to the name of the deceased, along with any photographs and video clips depicting the deceased, be promptly removed from all social media platforms and electronic media.

"This Court is constrained to issue an injunctive order since the social and electronic media have proceeded to publish the identity of the deceased and photographs of the dead body after the recovery of the body,” read the order.

“We accordingly direct that all references to the name of the deceased in the above incident, photographs and video clips shall forthwith be removed from all social media platforms and electronic media in compliance with this order,” the court added.

A bench headed by CJI D.Y. Chandrachud also pulled up the West Bengal government over the publication of the name, photographs and video clips of the deceased victim. "It is extremely concerning. We are first to recognise the right to free speech, but there are well-settled parameters," it said.

On Tuesday, the Supreme Court also ordered the formation of a national task force to suggest measures for the security of medical professionals across the country, observing that the safety of doctors is the "highest national concern".

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

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalKabul residents struggle as groundwater levels plunge

EntertainmentHow Much Did It Cost to Make Kantara Chapter 1? Rishab Shetty’s Film Budget Revealed

TechnologyTongue may hold clues to detect, track motor neurone disease: Study

HealthTongue may hold clues to detect, track motor neurone disease: Study

EntertainmentSydney Sweeney: I had someone tell me to fix my face

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyAttacks on Adani Group coordinated effort to undermine India’s growth: Lawyer

TechnologyOpenAI’s big bet on India: Free ChatGPT Go access for 1 year starting Nov 4

TechnologyAmazon laying off about 30,000 corporate employees, starting Tuesday: Report

TechnologySensex, Nifty open higher amid mixed global cues

TechnologyElectronics manufacturing growth will generate thousands of new jobs: Minister