The move is, no doubt, highly welcome.
And commendable too - given that, these days, it takes some guts - even on
the part of the highest court of the land, to take some plainly sensible
decision.

The only apprehension is that, under the obtaining circumstances, the
"expert" members, on the committee, may feel too insecure to give an
opinion - howsoever justified, which may displease - let alone anger, the
regime in place.
That quite a few "experts" approached by the Court have indicated
disinclination - to join the contemplated committee, perhaps testifies to
that perception.

This sense of panic is far from without any basis.
In fact, the most glaring and illustrative example is that of Ashok Lavasa
- a former member of the Election Commission, who got, eventually, hounded
out of that august body with liberal use of the proverbial "stick" and,
finally, some "carrot" too. Had he been there, he'd have been the CEC
today. Mr. Lavasa's crime, as it appears, was that he had been inclined to
take independent stands, regardless of whether these would be liked by the
regime.
At a very different end, yet another is that the mobile number of the
(faceless) woman stuff attached to the then CJI, Ranjan Gogoi, who had
lodged a complaint of sexual harassment by her boss, (allegedly) figures in
the leaked Pegasus data bank together with those of her close relations.

Under the circumstances, unless the Court can provide some sort of
legitimate protection to the prospective members from the very real threat
of being harassed - to put it rather mildly, in future, it may so happen
that only those who are in search of an opportunity to get into the good
books of the regime may actually queue up.
That would defeat the purported purpose.

*The Supreme Court said Thursday that it would set up a committee of
experts to study the allegations of illegal surveillance using Pegasus
spyware and issue orders next week. Expert panels appointed by the court
always test the separation of powers but in this case, the move is vital
and welcome. When the executive cites national security, a probe under an
SC-appointed committee has more credibility than one by a government panel.
At stake are vital issues involving civil liberties, including the right to
privacy of citizens, the integrity of institutions and due process. The
public is entitled to know, as the court said, “whether this spyware has
been used by the government by any other method other than permissible
under the law”.*

(Excerpted from: <
https://indianexpress-com.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/indianexpress.com/article/opinion/editorials/supreme-court-pegasus-spyware-nso-group-7530432/lite/
>.)

Also look up: I/II. <
https://indianexpress.com/article/india/pegasus-row-sc-to-pronounce-order-next-week-7529112/
>.
II. 'Pegasus Scam in Supreme Court Today: Despite Prodding the Centre
Refuses to Unseal Its Lips' at <
https://groups.google.com/g/greenyouth/c/VBZ30qtLZ88/m/JxfRGYnfCQAJ>.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web, visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/greenyouth/CACEsOZh8paCA73djMeVvzJuNBPcp9VFpUnmYdB8AYfw9Rt3%3Djg%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to