Sometimes the best of intentions can camouflage the worst of motives. On the face of it, the government's bid to bring in a privacy bill is a welcome move, a long-overdue measure. But after an initial approach paper prepared by lawyers and bureaucrats in November last year, the government went into a secretive huddle. Now a leaked April 19, 2011, version of the bill raises several disturbing questions.
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TV news channels could be the most affected by this. Sting operations could become a very risky thing in the future, with section four of the proposed bill saying that any form of filming/recording can be deemed as surveillance and anyone doing so without proper authorisation would be liable for prosecution. So if someone was to secretly catch on camera MPs accepting cash for posing questions in Parliament, or record a bureaucrat demanding bribes, chances are he/she will be doing time in jail.
While the proposed draft draws a distinction between data and personal information, it still leaves little room for journalists. For instance, if a reporter were to use "personal information" of an individual for an article without his/her written consent, it will amount to a civil offence and immediately attract a penalty of up to Rs. 1 lakh. If the journalists were to repeat the "offence" by publishing another story using the same material, the penalty goes up to Rs. 5 lakh. So, is the UPA government, under the scanner for a plethora of scams, trying to muzzle the media? It certainly seems so.
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Ramanathan's discomfiture has its reasons. "In the past three years, the government has become far more intrusive than it ever was. All this is asserting the sovereignty of the state over the citizen when the Constitution says that the citizen is supreme. This bill, in its current form, also brings in an element of pre-censorship that violates our fundamental right to speech as well as several judgements of the Supreme Court that ruled against pre-censorship."
On the other hand, former cabinet secretary K.M. Chandrashekhar, a prime mover behind the bill during his tenure, feels that the security needs of the state warrant "lawful" intrusion by it. "The idea was to protect privacy but not short-circuit the current surveillance systems in place for combating terrorism."
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Satyananda Mishra, the chief information commissioner and a former secretary, DoPT, has a nuanced view of the proposed bill. He feels public interest must outweigh privacy in every case. "But while we accept the primacy of public interest, we must be very, very careful about what is public interest," he says.
Mishra, in many ways the country's biggest trustee of transparency in public life today, suggests a few key modifications in the conditions in the proposed legislature. "We need to understand that after the enactment of the RTI Act, it has become incumbent upon us to have some form of inherent disclosure in all our public dealings. This will also safeguard our privacy from the government."
The relationship between citizen and government, says Mishra, is guided by a social contract. "People elect governments and trust them with their lives and liberty in the promise that the government will exercise its powers for their welfare. But there could be instances where the government breaks that promise. It could legitimately tap someone's phone through legal means, but with malicious intent."
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While the government will take its time to introduce the bill in Parliament, it needs to be more transparent in its deliberations. Right now two ministries are working simultaneously on the same bill. While the ministry of law and justice under Veerappa Moily is busy shaping its draft, the ministry of personnel, training and public grievances under the prime minister is busy formulating its own version. While they work on it, what both ministries must recognise is that nothing is private about public policy.
AUTHORS: SAIKAT DATTA
TAGS: PRIVACY | LAW | PHONE TAPPING & SURVEILLANCE | TELECOM | MEDIA | FREE SPEECH | TV| JOURNALISTS | STING OPERATIONS: CAUGHT ON CAMERA
SECTION: NATIONAL
JUL 02, 2011 01:46 PM 1 | The PMs dark musings about India becoming a police state appear to be turning out to be true! |
JUL 02, 2011 02:42 PM 2 | On issues pertaining to national security, the government is entitled to the widest possible latitude, on all else, the media should enjoy a free run. |
JUL 03, 2011 06:09 AM 3 | Good analysis. The balance between right to privacy and people's right to know is delicate and must be scrupulously maintained. |