SC seeks explanation from Maharashtra on Facebook arrests
By PTI - NEW DELHI
30th November 2012 12:32 PM
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"The Maharashtra government is directed to explain the circumstances under which the two girls - Shaheen Dhada and Rinu Shrinivasan - were arrested for posting comments made by them on Facebook," a bench comprising Chief Justice Altamas Kabir and Justice J Chelameswar said. | PTI/File
The Supreme Court today directed
the Maharashtra government to explain the circumstances under
which its police arrested two girls from Palghar in Thane
district for posting comments on Facebook on the November 18
shutdown for Bal Thackeray's funeral.
"The Maharashtra government is directed to explain the
circumstances under which the two girls - Shaheen Dhada and
Rinu Shrinivasan - were arrested for posting comments made by
them on Facebook," a bench comprising Chief Justice Altamas
Kabir and Justice J Chelameswar said.
The bench asked the state government to file its response
within four weeks on the public interest litigation filed by a
Delhi student, Shreya Singhal.
The bench also made as parties the governments of West
Bengal and Puducherry where similar incidents had happened in
the recent past.
It also issued notice to the Delhi government along with
them and sought their response within four weeks and posted
the matter for hearing after six weeks.
Attorney General G E Vahanvati, whose assistance was
sought by the court, said,"Please examine section 66A of the
Information Technology Act, 2000 and I will assist the court
on this issue."
The AG also referred to the guidelines which say that
cases to be registered under the provision of the IT Act has
to be decided by senior police officials of the ranks of DGP
for cases pertaining to rural areas and IGP for metros.
"This can't be done by the head of the police stations,"
the AG said, adding that this was a matter which required the
court's consideration.
Meanwhile, senior advocate Mukul Rohatgi, appearing for
Shreya, sought a direction from the court that no cases be
registered across the country unless such complaints are seen
and approved by the DGP of the state concerned.
During the hearing, the Attorney General said that the arrest of the two Mumbai-based girls was unjustified but it
does not mean that section 66A should be done away with as the
provision was well intended.
Rohatgi said that the provision of the IT Act, which
gives power to arrest, is "wholly unconstitutional" and needed
to be done away with.
"The provision is unconstitutional. Of course, it would
be decided by the Supreme Court," he said, adding that a
direction to all the states was required that no case be
registered under this provision unless the complaint is seen
and approved by the DGP concerned of the state as "the law and
order is a state subject and unless there is some kind of
order from this court, this (abuse of the provision) may not
stop."
There are thousands of police stations in the country
and, hence an order from this court is needed, Rohatgi said,
to which the bench said that all police stations are not
alike.
Meanwhile, some other civil rights group and NGOs
submitted to the court that they be also allowed to intervene
as parties to the ongoing hearing on this issue.
"Not only one section, there are other provisions of the
Act and the rules which are unconstitutional," Prashant
Bhushan said, while seeking to intervene as a party.
Rohatgi said, "I have no objection if a person is allowed
to intervene..."
Yesterday, while agreeing to hear the PIL seeking
amendments to the IT Act, the bench had said, "The way the
little children were arrested, it outraged the sentiments of
the people of the country. The way these things had been
taking place needs consideration."
The petitioner, Shreya, in her plea, has contended that
"the phraseology of Section 66A of the IT Act, 2000 is so wide
and vague and incapable of being judged on objective
standards, that it is susceptible to wanton abuse and, hence
falls foul of Article 14, 19 (1)(a) and Article 21 of the
Constitution."
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Comments(2)
The authorities obviously appreciate the sensibilities of the public and the media and hence have issued some good guidelines in this regard. Similarly in the case of the SC/ST Atrocities ACT also many misuses take place through fake fabricated framing of cases to settle some personal or private scores, departmental petty matters, to make some people fall in line by vested interests and their agents to harass some targeted people etc. So here also the prior written signed sanction of an IG Police or DCP at village level needs to be enforced immediately to prevent such misuses of the said Act also.The Magistrate must also apply his mind fairly, properly and throughly to understand the real motives of the complainant also. While on the internet, facebook etc three principal factors - Sthan, Kaal, Paatra - also need to be judiciously kept in view. There have been quiote a few instances of highly unparliamentary usage of expressions, very vulgar comments etc on internet posts..
Posted by Observer at 11/30/2012 12:55 Reply to this Report abuse
Obviously many of these very vulgar posts were without the knowledge of their parents. High time some voluntary restraint in vulgar semantics on the inernet are exercised by these users. Users also supposed to observe some minimal standards of intternet posts norms, etiquettes, standards etc. Let these minimal norms be followed at least henceforth.in this context.
Posted by Observerf at 11/30/2012 12:56 Reply to this Report abuse