New Delhi: The Supreme Court
on Friday stayed a judicial inquiry into the Pegasus spyware allegations
that had been commissioned by the West Bengal state government. The
inquiry commission set up by the state is headed by former Supreme Court
judge Justice Madan B. Lokur.
A bench led by Chief Justice of India N.V. Ramana expressed
unhappiness with the parallel inquiry when an independent probe panel
had been constituted by the apex court, LiveLaw reported. The bench also comprised Justices Surya Kant and Hima Kohli.
An NGO named ‘Global Village Foundation Charitable Trust’ had
challenged the West Bengal proceedings through senior advocate Harish
Salve.
CJI Ramana asked senior advocate Abhishek Manu Singhvi, appearing for
West Bengal, about what had happened to his previous oral submission
that the state government won’t proceed further. “Mr Singhvi, what is
this? Last time you gave the undertaking. We wanted to record you said
don’t record. Again you started the inquiry?”
Singhvi said that the
state government does not control the commission. “I said I don’t
control the Commission and I’ll convey the constraint. I did. The
commission started. Please call their counsel and pass orders. As a
State, I can’t restrain the Commission,” he responded.
The CJI said he “understood the state’s predicament”. “Issue notice to all parties. We stay proceedings,” he added.
On October 27, the Supreme Court had set up
an independent expert committee to investigate the use of Pegasus
spyware against journalists, opposition politicians and others,
overruling pleas by the government that national security concerns
required a veil be placed on the question of surveillance.
The ruling followed revelations made this July by The Wire and
its global media partners in the Pegasus Project reports about how the
smart phones of over a dozen people were found infected or targeted by
spyware. These individuals were part of a larger group of persons whose
numbers figured in a leaked database of probable Pegasus targets around
the world.
SOURCE ; THE WIRE
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