Wednesday, January 30, 2019

Govt. amends anti-graft law, CM office now under Lokayukta Act

Article in the Indian Express dated January 30, 2019 regarding the amendment of the Lokayukta Act bringing Maharashtra CM under its perviewLink to this article:

http://epaper.indianexpress.com/c/36231866

Lokayukta to cover Maharashtra CM, but not while in office

Source: Times of India dated 30.01.2019
By Prafulla.Marpakwar@timesgroup.com


Unclear if CrPC can be used to conduct inquiry

Though the Lokayukta may have got some powers following the state cabinet’s move to bring the CM under its purview, it is still not clear if the Lokayukta will have powers under the Criminal Procedure Code to conduct a probe against a CM and if it will have an independent investigating agency at its disposal. Maharashtra was the first state to set up the institution of Lokayukta in 1971, followed by Rajasthan, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh.

According to data compiled by the Lokayukta a few years ago, while the institution of Lokayukta and Upa-Lokayukta existed in 16 states, Lokayuktas in 10 states have powers to probe present and past CMs; these are MP, Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka, Gujarat, Kerala, Delhi, Goa, Punjab, Orissa and Haryana. The Lokayuktas of Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Bihar and UP were until now barred from investigating the CM.

Only four states – MP, HP, AP and Karnataka – have set up an independent probe agency to assist Lokayukta. The agencies have serving IPS officers of DGP rank. “The DGP reports to the Lokayukta,” a bureaucrat said. Further, five – HP, Karnataka (whose ex-Lokayukta Santosh Hedge carried out a highprofile probe some years ago) Kerala, Goa and Punjab -- have given Lokayukta powers of search and seizure. In several states, including Maharashtra, Lokayukta can launch a suo moto probe. “Importantly, in most states, except Maharashtra, the Lokayukta has powers under CrPC to probe cabinet members and officials. So Lokayukta has the powers to arrest even a CM if there is a specific complaint,” the bureaucrat said.

TIMES VIEW : While the first step of including a CM wtihin the purview of the Act has been taken, the more crucial step of allowing an incumbent CM to be probed has been bypassed. Hopefully sitting CMs will have to face scrutiny soon enough, as a result of furtherchanges to the legislation. If that does not happen, this move will be symbolic and will even be seen as cosmetic with hardly any changes on the ground.

Tuesday, January 29, 2019

Judging the Judges

Article in the Indian Express dated January 29, 2019 regarding the South Korea's judiciary sourced from the Economist newspaperLink to this article:

http://epaper.indianexpress.com/c/36196035

Monday, January 28, 2019

SIC orders Maha govt to include RTI clause while disbursing funds

Source: DNA dated 28.01.2019

Ashutosh M. Shukla s_ashutosh@dnaindia.net


The state information commission (SIC) in a landmark order has directed the government to put a condition of RTI applicability when giving funds. The order will enable citizens to get information of records of all decisions and works that are related to government funding under RTI. Until now, a number of bodies evaded RTI and giving information stating that they did not get “substantial funding”.
Several schools and colleges said they did not have certain information and that it was with the Trust governing it. The trust would say that RTI is not applicable to it because it did not get any state funding. Now, at the time of funding or registration, a clause will have to be introduced that records all decisions and works related to government funding under the RTI Act.
The SIC order passed on January 9, 2019 is directed to chief secretary, additional chief secretary (school education), secretary of higher and technical education, secretary of medical education and registrar of University of Mumbai. It was passed on by Ajit Kumar Jain, state information commissioner (Brihanmumbai bench) on an appeal of Dr Susy Kuriakose, resident of Prabhadevi. It has to be implemented by February 15, 2019.
“I am yet to get information. The order gives time till February 15. It is a fair order. I think it should bring in more transparency for those who are working in aided colleges,” said Kuriakose.
DNA could not get in touch with BVB. D K Jain, chief secretary said, “We are processing the directions”.
Kuriakose had sought information from Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan (BVB) regarding meeting of governing committee, the notice of the meeting, agenda, minutes of meeting and report sent to the college in which her suspension and removal was decided. During the second appeal hearing, the Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan stated that the RTI is not applicable to it.

Friday, January 25, 2019

After stricter law on child rape, death sentences hit two-decade high

Article in the Indian Express dated January 25, 2019 regarding the Statistical information on death sentences and POCSO Act  by Amrith LalLink to this article:

http://epaper.indianexpress.com/c/36106190

The Constitution was a leap of faith

Source: Hindustan Times dated 25.01.2019

  • NAMITA WAHI (Namita Wahi is fellow at the Centre for Policy Research, and director of the Land Rights Initiative The views expressed are personal

We must reward its founders by emerging from the pettiness of our current public discourse

Sixty-nine years ago, the adoption of the Indian Constitution was regarded variously, as a “reckless” political experiment, a cause for celebration amidst uncertainty, as India set out to be the world’s “largest democracy”, and of triumph amid tragedy, as it became a republic during the bloodbath of Partition. The first Constitution of a commonwealth country to be drafted entirely by its own nationals, the Indian Constitution was, and remains, the longest written constitution in the world. The length of the Constitution is a reflection of the magnitude of problems facing the newly independent nation, including its very integration as a nation state; the need to reassure minorities following Partition; and the need to build a new social and economic order that would lift millions out of poverty, even as it sought to eliminate pervasive social and religious discrimination.
Some of these problems and uncertainties continue to resonate today. But as India enters the 70th year of the Republic, it has the new moniker of being the world’s largest “stable” democracy, a feat unique to India in the post colonial world. The resilience of the Constitution is a testament to the founders’ foresight in imbuing its text with the spirit of diversity amid unity. The Indian Constitution is not one constitution, but many. Though Article 370, for the state of Jammu and Kashmir, is the most well known exception to the Constitution’s general provisions, the entirety of part XXI of the Constitution contains differentiated provisions for the states of Assam, Nagaland, Manipur, Mizoram, Sikkim, and Arunachal Pradesh. Part X of the Constitution creates a differentiated legal framework for “Scheduled Areas” within 14 states of India, that constitute 13% of India’s geographical area, including the entire state of Meghalaya, and more than half the states of Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand and Tripura.
The Constitution is also resilient because it was wedded to the principle of incrementalism. The founders were deeply conscious that they were guaranteeing fundamental rights to life, liberty, equality, and property, to all citizens, in a society deeply divided on the basis of religion, caste, and gender. Therefore, in the chapters on ‘Fundamental Rights’ and ‘Directive Principles of State Policy’, they provided pointers, not answers for resolving tensions that would inevitably arise between the interests of the individual vs. the collective.
Resolution of tensions between “individual property” and “state’s power to take away property” for the “collective good of economic development and social redistribution”, resulted in the abolition of the fundamental right to property in 1978. Tensions with respect to “individual women’s rights to equality” vs. “collective religious diktats” have been playing out, with intermittent resolution, for many decades. Instances are: the case of Muslim women’s rights to divorce and maintenance, from the Shah Bano case in the 1980s to the current bill criminalising triple talaq, and Hindu women’s rights to inheritance of joint family property from the 1950s to equal religious right to worship in the context of the Sabarimala case today.
Despite our Constitution’s resilience, we can never take its continued existence and the stability of India’s democracy for granted. In fact, the greatest threats to the Constitution come because we expect both too much, and too little from our Constitution. The recent constitutional amendment on “poor upper caste reservations”, which has turned the concept of reservation-based affirmative action on its head, is an example of how public disaffection with the state’s redistributive failures is sought to be temporarily assuaged through recourse to the Constitution.
The constitutional amendment, while it exists (there are strong reasons to believe that it is unconstitutional), will momentarily camouflage the ineptitude and decay of our public institutions, and the failure of our “economic development” narrative, but will not resolve the crisis that threatens the social and economic, and therefore, the political stability of the nation.
This deflection of public disaffection from our Parliament and executive towards the Constitution is a grotesque pantomime that we have seen played out previously in the context of the abolition of the fundamental right to property. The period since the abolition of the right has in fact seen a far greater increase in economic inequalities, and “land grabs”, than the one when the “fundamental right to property” was intact.
We also expect too little from our Constitution. The Pathalgarhi movement is an example of how provisions for “tribal autonomy” within the text of the Constitution and their ambiguities can be used to construct a narrative of demands for greater decentralisation and self-governance through gram sabhas in the Scheduled Areas.
It is not clear why “We the People” did not similarly use our fundamental rights to liberty and equality, and constitutional right to property, to hold the government accountable for its demonetisation exercise that has proven to be an economic disaster. Or why we remained silent when the Supreme Court, the self appointed highest guardian of the Constitution, winked at the unconstitutionality of passing the Aadhaar law as a money bill, or gave unsatisfying verdicts on recent public controversies, including the Central Bureau of Investigation director’s removal and the legitimacy of the Rafale deal?
The founders took a leap of faith in imagining this magnificent Constitution for us, with the humility that even as they showed us the way forward, they didn’t have all the answers, and the hope that we would use it wisely, to build a peaceful and prosperous nation where everyone has the opportunity to “develop according to their own genius”. In the 70th year of the Republic, “We the People” must reward their imagination by emerging from the pettiness and binaries of our current public discourse, and expanding our own political imagination of the possibilities for the future of India.
We must respect the founders’ faith in us by pledging to renew constitutional values of resolving tensions through dialogue even as we respect differences, and to strengthen the fabric of our public institutions that have the power to both build and break the republic.

Friday, January 18, 2019

The Divorce Bill: de-stigmatising leprosy sufferers

Source: DNA dated 18.01.2019
Article by Vineeta Shanker, Executive Director, S-ILF

It is heartening to note that the government has finally taken note of the huge lacuna in the country’s laws which still include clauses that discriminate against those who happen to be affected by leprosy. Recently, the government made a commendable move towards the elimination of leprosy discrimination in India with the Lok Sabha passing the bill removing leprosy as a ground for divorce. In today’s age, when leprosy, being a bacterial disease, is treatable, and a person becomes non-infective within 24 hours of starting treatment, the grounds on which the law was made no longer exist. Even more, disease and ailment as a legitimate reason for divorce within the legal system only enhances and reaffirms the stigma that exists against those affected and is a violation of human rights. This step is sure to contribute to the improvement of the overall social environment and the negative perception around leprosy.
It is worth noting here that even today there are around 19 national and state laws and possibly more municipal and local body laws that discriminate on the basis of leprosy. In fact, the law commission had, in April 2015, suo moto drafted an EDPAL (Eliminating Discrimination Against Persons Affected by Leprosy) bill, which sought to render null and void any law/clause which discriminates on the basis of leprosy. This bill would have obviated the need for the tedious parliamentary oversight on clause-by-clause examination for contravening tenets. Unfortunately, despite having been taken up by a number of NGOs, this bill has not found a suitable champion
The passing of the Divorce Bill is encouraging since it recognises leprosy as a medical condition, as a disease which can be diagnosed, treated, and cured. Through Multi-Drug Therapy (MDT), more than 15 million persons have been cured globally in the last two decades. The strong message that this Bill sends is that leprosy need not be feared. It is in line with the protection of human rights of those affected by leprosy. India is a signatory to the UN Human Rights Council Resolution recognising discrimination against leprosy to be a violation of human rights. For those affected, it is a reaffirmation of their rights and a government recognition that the stigma against the disease is unwarranted.
The need to address the issue of stigma in India is critical. Today India has the highest prevalence rate of leprosy in the world. More than 55 per cent of all new cases are in India, and India accounts for 5 per cent of the total global leprosy burden. Many countries, far behind India in terms of economic growth, have done a better job of tackling the disease and bringing down the new cases to Eliminate Rate � which is less than one per 10,000 population. India too achieved it at the national level as far back as 2005. Unfortunately, however, since then the progress in the elimination of leprosy as a public health concern has been slow and in absolute numbers � stagnant.
The government has in recent years taken cognisance of this and intensified its efforts on multiple fronts to detect, diagnose and treat those affected. Most of these efforts on the medical side have resulted in many more cases being identified and in being identified before the onset of leprosy-related disabilities. This, in turn, will help in interrupting the transmission of the disease and eventually lowering its incidence in the country.
A major factor that slows down the efforts on the medical side is the social stigma attached to the disease as it prevents people from seeking early treatment. Afraid of social exclusion and rejection, those affected try to hide it till it can no longer be hidden. Late detection and treatment, even though it can cure the disease cannot reverse the nerve damage and disabilities. It also results in the continued transmission of the disease.
To address the stigma, greater social awareness and a change in the social environment where leprosy is no longer feared and those affected are accepted and included is essential. To this end, the recent Divorce Bill is a step in the right direction. It gives the right social message.
The good work begun by the government on the social front needs to be further strengthened. The discriminatory clauses in the different laws need to be annulled; affirmative action to include those affected within the social welfare net needs to be stepped up; above all a determined effort at raising awareness about scientific facts about leprosy and overcoming myths and fears associated with it addressed to ensure that India too becomes leprosy free.

An opaque bench

Article in the Indian Express dated January 18, 2019 regarding the Elevation of judges by the Collegium by Ajit Prakash Shah. Link to this article:

http://epaper.indianexpress.com/c/35877699

Wednesday, January 16, 2019

The collegium system isn’t foolproof

Source: The Hindustan Times dated 16.01.2019

Article by Rajiv Nair (Rajiv Nayar is a senior advocate. The views expressed are personal.)

The supersession of three senior Delhi HC judges exposes a chink in the process of appointment of judges.


The recent decision of the Collegium of the Supreme Court on January 10, 2019, in recommending the names of Justices Dinesh Maheshwari and Sanjiv Khanna to the Court has evoked strong reaction inasmuch as Justice Khanna’s appointment will entail the supersession of Justices Pradeep Nandrajog, Gita Mittal and S Ravindra Bhat of the Delhi High Court. Suppose, for example, we were in the pre-collegium regime, such a decision would have been described as being arbitrary and whimsical because all of the three proposed to be superseded are fine judges and are neither lacking integrity nor judicial competence.
This decision once again exposes a chink in the process of appointment of judges, a process arrogated to itself by the Supreme Court (in the Supreme Court of Advocates on Record case, 1993), where it was laid down that with regard to the appointment of judges, the opinion of the Chief Justice of India (CJI) would not only have primacy but would be determinative in the matter.
The 1993 and 1998 verdicts also gave birth to the collegium system, which comprised of the Chief Justice of India and the senior most four judges of the Court after the CJI.
This is not the first time that the collegium system has inflicted injustice. Justice AP Shah was kept out of the Supreme Court because Justice SH Kapadia was averse to him. Take a more recent example. One of our finest judges, Justice Sanjay Kishan Kaul, suffered the ignominy of not making it to the Supreme Court in time, because he had happened to incur the wrath of Justice TS Thakur, while he was in the Delhi High Court. Several years later, Justice Thakur refused to recommend his name. He made it to the Supreme Court eventually but lost out in being made a Chief Justice of India.
The subjectivity and the inconsistency of the collegium system makes one wonder whether there should be a relook at the process of appointment of judges and the National Judicial Accountability Commission should be re-introduced in some form or the other. Although the NJAC Act, 2014, meant to replace the collegium system of judges, was struck down on October 16, 2015, by a majority of 4 - 1, it may be opportune that the reconstituted Parliament after the upcoming Lok Sabha elections, should bring a legislation so as to bring about a greater transparency and objectivity in the process of appointment of judges. Now take the case in hand. The collegium on December 12, 2018, had apparently recommended the names of Justices Menon and Pradeep Nandrajog to the Supreme Court. The fact that the recommendations were not sent cannot detract from the fact that the proposal to appoint these judges to the Supreme Court had been effectuated. On January 10, 2019, with the departure of Justice Madan B Lokur, (who would have never countenanced any supersession), Justice R Menon, one of the finest chief justices the Delhi High Court has known for a long time, and Justice Nandrajog’s names were recalled by the newly constituted collegium, deeming it appropriate to have a fresh look at the matter allegedly in the light of the additional material that had become available.
What was the additional material that had become available to the collegium justifying the non-appointment of these two judges to the Supreme Court, recommending the appointment of Justice Maheshwari when on October 30, 2018, the collegium itself had overlooked his name? In the past, and certainly under the pre-collegium system, appointments in derogation of the seniority principle would have evoked strong reactions. There were aberrations by the executive but such instances were rare and insignificant. The proposed recommendations are inconsistent with the judicial view of the Supreme Court in the Second Judge’s case, 1993, wherein it had been laid down that:
“Inter-se seniority amongst Judges in their High Court and their combined seniority on all India basis is of admitted significance in the matter of future prospects … It is, therefore, reasonable that this aspect is kept in view and given due weight while making appointments from amongst High Court Judges to the Supreme Court. Unless there be any strong cogent reason to justify a departure, that order of seniority must be maintained between them while making their appointment to the Supreme Court … this would also lend greater credence to the process of appointment and would avoid any distortion in the seniority between the appointees drawn even from the same High Court.”
Supersession, as a rule, must never be encouraged unless there are grave and compelling circumstances. In the present case, none appear to be so. The government itself had delayed the appointment of justice KM Joseph to the Supreme Court on the ground that there were other judges more senior to him. Justice Maheshwari is ranked 21st and justice Khanna 33rd in the All India Seniority List. It is not as if there is anything against these two judges but why should they not await their turn? Let us see what “sixer” (to borrow the expression of the law minister) the government hits.

Tuesday, January 15, 2019

Disquiet in section of court over way in which Collegium changed judge choices for SC

Article in the Indian Express dated January 15, 2019 regarding the Elevation of judges by the Collegium by Seema Chishti. Link to this article:

http://epaper.indianexpress.com/c/35808802

Thursday, January 10, 2019

The Amendment Procedure (The Constitution (124th Amendment) Bill, 2019)

Article in the Indian Express dated January 10, 2019 regarding the Amendment procedure with reference to the Constitution (124th Amendment) Bill, 2019 by Kaunain Sheriff M. Link to this article:

http://epaper.indianexpress.com/c/35658181

Wednesday, January 9, 2019

Sec 69 of the IT Act: Fears of violation of privacy may not be unfounded

Source: Hindustan Times dated 09.01.2019

  • RAM NARAIN Ram Narain is former senior deputy director general, department of telecom The views expressed are personal

The problem is not in the notification. It’s ingrained in this section of the IT Act, a loose piece of legislation
THOUGH THE SECTION 5(2) OF THE INDIAN TELEGRAPH ACT APPEARS TO PASS THE TEST OF ‘NECESSITY’ AND ‘PROPORTIONALITY’ OF SURVEILLANCE, THE SECTION 69 OF THE ACT IN ITS PRESENT FORM DOES NOT APPEAR TO DO SO

The December 2018 notification by the ministry of home affairs, which specified 10 agencies for interception, monitoring and decryption of information under the section 69 of the Information Technology (IT) Act in pursuance of Information Technology Rules 2009, turned into a hot topic of debate. The question the notification raises is: whether the circular diminishes or improves the protection of citizens against misuse of power for surveillance by the agencies.
To my mind, by specifying the list of agencies, the notification streamlines the process of surveillance and, hence, is a positive step. However, fears of unreasonable violation of privacy may not be unfounded.
The problem does not lie in the notification; it is ingrained in section 69 of the IT Act itself, which is a loose piece of legislation. According to the section 5(2) of the Indian Telegraph Act 1885, interception and monitoring is permitted under five conditions: in the interest of sovereignty and integrity of India; the security of the State; friendly relations with foreign States; to maintain public order; and prevent incitement to the commission of an offence. Further, under this Act, the communication on fly — when it is passing through the network of the telecom service providers — can be intercepted and monitored.
On the other hand, section 69 (1) of the IT Act has an additional sixth condition: ‘investigation of crime’. It includes not only the communication on fly but also the stored data, information and communication. It also enables the agencies to reach subscribers directly, besides through intermediaries.
The implications of these seemingly innocuous differences are gigantic. By including the ‘investigation of crime’, scope of the law increases many more times because eventualities covered under the
five conditions of Indian Telegraph Act are far less than the eventualities covered under the additional sixth condition of IT Act, simply because there are lakhs of cases under investigation.
By including the provision of storing data, agencies’ reach increase both in scope and time-dimension. Although the time limit for the validity of an order has been prescribed as a maximum of 180 days under the rules notified in 2009. But there is nothing to prevent an agency from accessing the information and data once stored in the system irrespective of the time it was stored first.
Whereas the Indian Telegraph Act envisages the network of telecom service providers as the location for interception, the section 69 covers not only a large number of intermediaries but also subscribers, making it highly intrusive kind of surveillance as against the non-intrusive one under the Indian Telegraph Act. These differences make the section 69 of the IT Act a highly potent tool against privacy of individuals.
But the icing on the cake is making it a punishable crime with seven years of imprisonment for not assisting the agencies. Under the Indian Telegraph Act, illegal interception and monitoring do allow for punishment, but there is no mention of explicit imprisonment if cooperation is not extended. Telecom service providers are merely controlled by licensing terms and conditions which are reflected in rules of Interception and Monitoring notified vide notification dated 1st March 2007.
Political parties accuse each other of turning the country into a surveillance State but in power their policies remain same as that of the previous regime. This is probably because political parties have little role in drafting such legislations, and indeed in most of the legislations; they broadly get a brief on intent, and wording the legislation reflects mostly the bureaucratic thinking. Politicians having signed the document become an invested party and are left with no choice but to defend them — unless they are very bold.
The undercurrent of the country’s political system has changed a lot since Independence, but the undercurrent of the bureaucracy, still the de facto rulers of the country's large proportion and without much accountability, has not undergone any fundamental change with respect to governing the citizens of the country, resulting in such loose legislations.
As communication and information technology changes, if the section 69 is required or not, and the efficacy of checks and balances in interception, approval and review are the topics for another time. But it can be concluded that though the section 5(2) of the Indian Telegraph Act appears to pass the test of ‘necessity’ and ‘proportionality’ of surveillance, the section 69 in its present form does not appear to do so.

Tuesday, January 8, 2019

After SC verdict, how amendments seek to change the law on Aadhaar

Article in the Indian Express dated January 8, 2019 regarding the Amendments proposed in the Aadhaar Act by Krishn Kaushik. Link to this article:

http://epaper.indianexpress.com/c/35591745

Saturday, January 5, 2019

We don't need career judges in India

Article in the Indian Express dated January 5, 2019 regarding the NITI Aayog's proposal for All India Judicial Service by Ameen Jauhar. Link to this article:

http://epaper.indianexpress.com/c/35498728

Friday, January 4, 2019

Move Fast And Break Things: Government’s new rules on internet regulation could kill innovation and privacy

Source: Times of India dated 04.01.2019

“Move fast and break things” is the now infamous mantra associated with the Silicon Valley internet giants. It’s an approach that prioritised speed of creation, even if mistakes were made on that dizzy path. As it turned out, their blunders were to have a serious impact on society, elections and democracy globally.
Now the Indian government risks falling into the same trap. Last week, it hurriedly revealed proposals to radically change the “Intermediary Liability” rules for internet companies, effectively requiring all internet services to actively censor “unlawful” user content or else face liability for such content.
The aim of holding large social platforms to higher standards of transparency and accountability is a valid one. But the proposals ask internet users to put even more trust into these companies, to decide what content is appropriate and what isn’t, and they haven’t earned that trust yet. Beyond large social media companies, the rules create an existential threat to the many other services they apply to. Perhaps it is the government’s turn to slow down now.
If the internet has been characterised by permission-less innovation and communication, this can be credited in large part to the very rules that are today under threat. The new rules are proposed under Section 79 of the Information Technology Act, which, like its global counterparts, currently ensures that companies generally have no obligations to actively censor content.
Until they know about them, the platforms have only limited liability for the illegal activities and postings of their users. In 2015, the Supreme Court clarified that companies would only be expected to remove user content if they are directed by a court to do so. The new rules turn this logic on its head and propose a zero-tolerance approach to “unlawful content”, where services must “proactively” purge their platforms of such content or else potentially face criminal or civil liability.
The term “unlawful” is not defined, but would likely include all content that is illegal under various laws in India. This ranges from child sexual abuse and videos of rape, to hateful speech against particular religious, caste or other groups, to content that is defamatory or infringes copyright.
Each of these involve legal standards that are vastly different, as is the surrounding context that determines their legality. Take for example, whether a video of a provocative speech was simply a case of advocacy or an incitement to violence. These are complex inquiries, and must be steeped in factual, social and political context.
Social media companies have been in the spotlight recently over controversial decisions to remove content that did not meet their own content guidelines, leading to calls for greater transparency. With the proposed rules, however, they will be further incentivised to “take down first, think later”, or prevent such content from surfacing at all.
Presumably to address the practical questions of scale, the draft rules require companies to deploy “automated tools to filter content”. Rather than creating more transparency about – or fairness in – platforms’ content moderation policies, this will only encourage a black box approach that is bound to lead to inaccurate and opaque decisions on content.
In encouraging automated tools the government is giving primacy to the speed and quantity, rather than the quality, of content removals. These are crude and inappropriate metrics of success where critical fundamental rights are at stake.
Even as the public outcry around unchecked government surveillance is growing, the draft rules also take another step backwards on the question of privacy. The rules also require these services to make available information about the creators or senders of content to government agencies. For end-to-end encrypted messaging platforms like WhatsApp and Signal, this could mean companies will be expected to intentionally store records of who sent messages to whom, with the sole purpose being government surveillance.
The government has justified these moves by invoking “instances of misuse of social media by criminals and anti-national elements”, but the rules they propose go far beyond the handful of companies they refer to. For small and medium-sized online services, as well as start-ups, for example, these content control obligations will be a disproportionate burden.
And the expansive definition of “intermediaries” in these rules would even include internet service providers, browsers and operating systems. For such entities, content control obligations seem entirely misplaced and inapplicable, and yet they create a legal risk that can’t be ignored.
In the full glare of media attention, the government has invited feedback. What this proposal needs, however, is a complete rethink. Building a rights protective framework for tackling illegal content on the internet is a challenging task. But any way you look at it, undermining encryption and outsourcing content regulation to companies are blunt and disproportionate tools.
For better or worse, our fundamental freedoms and rights online are intertwined with the laws that apply to the mediums we use to communicate. This is not about the concerns of a handful of companies alone. Rather than see this move through the trope of big tech versus big brother, we must understand that it is, above all, a threat to internet users.
The writer is a lawyer and public policy adviser at Mozilla

HC to decide on copyright for old songs

Source: Times of India dated 04.01.2019
Mumbai:
Bombay high court on Thursday said it will soon consider if reproduction of old traditional songs amounts to copyright violation and is liable for criminal action. A division bench of Justices B P Dharmadhikari and Revati Mohite-Dere admitted a petition filed by lyricist and song writer Pramod Surya and publishers Pukhraj Surya and Hiten Patel, seeking to quash an FIR lodged against them for copyright violation.
The petition stated that Surya had compiled old Marwari and traditional Gujarati songs, sung during marriages and other ceremonies, and published them in two books. In December 2014, Ashadevi Sonigada had filed a complaint at Malad police station alleging that Surya and the publishers had copied a song she had already published in her book. PTI

HC to decide on copyright of old, traditional songs

Source: DNA dated 04.01.2019

The Bombay High Court on Thursday said it will soon consider if the reproduction of old traditional songs amounts to copyright violation and is liable for criminal action.
A division bench of Justices BP Dharmadhikari and Revati Mohite-Dere admitted a petition filed by lyricist and song writer Pramod Surya and two publishers Pukhraj Surya and Hiten Patel, seeking to quash an FIR lodged against them for copyright violation.
According to the petition, Pramod Surya had made a compilation of old Marwari and Gujarati traditional songs, sung during marriage and other ceremonies, and published them in two books.
In December 2014, one Ashadevi Sonigada had filed a complaint at the Malad police station alleging that Pramod Surya and the two publishers had copied a song that she had already published in one of her books.
The high court, after hearing brief arguments, sought to know as to how copyright can be claimed on such songs.
“These are old traditional songs that have been played and sung at weddings and other ceremonies for generations. How can one claim copyright on it? This is like saying our national anthem and ‘Vande Mataram’ cannot be reproduced by anyone anywhere,” Justice Dharmadhikari said.
While admitting the petition, the bench directed the police not to file its charge sheet in the case against the lyricist and the publishers.
“We will consider the issue whether reproduction of old traditional songs and compilation of such songs amounts to copyright violations and criminal action,” the court said.

‘Can’t claim copyright over songs, tales that have been in public space’

Source: Hindustan Times dated 04.01.2019

  • Kanchan Chaudhari n kanchan.chaudhari@hindustantimes.com

  • MUMBAI:No individual can claim copyright over something that has been in public domain for long, such as the national song or anthem, the Bombay high court (HC) said on Thursday.
    The division bench of Justice BP Dharmadhikari and Justice Revati Mohite-Dere was hearing a petition filed by three city residents, Pramod Sharma, Pukhraj Sharma and Hiten Patel, seeking quashing of the criminal proceedings initiated against them for copyright violations.
    Acting on their plea, the bench restrained the Malad police from filing a charge sheet in the case.
    In December 2014, Malad police booked the trio under relevant sections of the Copyrights Act, 1977, for purported infringement of copyright of a book written by Ashadevi Sonigda.
    Sonigda claimed that she has written books depicting Mewad folk songs and folktales and has obtained necessary copyright certificate from the Copyright Board in 2013. She alleged that the trio copied contents of her books and incorporated the same in books written and published by them, and thus infringed her copyright.
    In 2016, the trio approached the HC, seeking quashing of the criminal proceedings against them contending that they too had obtained copyright certificate from the Copyright Board of the books published by them, albeit a year after the complainant woman obtained the certificate.
    Their lawyer pointed out that the contents of the books, over which the complainant claimed copyright, is in public domain and the traditional songs are being sung by women during marriages in certain Marwari communities. The tales have been doing rounds within the community for ages, the lawyer said.
    The bench accepted the contention. The judges felt that the complainant could not have staked exclusive copyright over traditional songs and legends, which have been circulated within the community for a long period.
    The directive came after additional public prosecutor FR Shaikh pointed out to the bench that investigation in the case was complete and charge-sheet was ready.

A judgment, a foundation

Article in the Indian Express dated January 4, 2019 regarding the Sajjan Kumar verdict by Balakrishnan Rajagopal. Link to this article:

http://epaper.indianexpress.com/c/35453932

The country's counsel

Article in the Indian Express dated January 4, 2019 regarding the responsibilities of the Attorney-General of India by C. Raj Kumar and Khagesh Gautam. Link to this article:

http://epaper.indianexpress.com/c/35465342

Thursday, January 3, 2019

Guilty till proved innocent

Article in the Indian Express dated January 3, 2019 regarding the amendment in the POCSO Act, 2012 by Arundhati Katju. Link to this article:

http://epaper.indianexpress.com/c/35442130

Wednesday, January 2, 2019

Govt plans IT Act changes to allow shutdown of apps, sites

Source: Times of India dated 02.01.2018

New Delhi:
The government plans to amend the IT law to increase penalty on apps and websites that are unable to control fake news and child pornography. Amendments will include an extreme provision of taking down apps and websites in violation.
The move comes days after senior officials of the IT ministry met representatives from top social-media and internet companies and sought views on proposed rules that would help trace the origin of unlawful content. This is one of the key areas of dispute between the government and companies.
“We need accountability and power to heavily penalise the companies in case of violations, or refusal to cooperate,” a senior government official told TOI. The amendments could potentially impact the operations of popular services like WhatsApp, Facebook, Google, Twitter and Telegram. Some of these services have had differences with the government over the issue of tracing origins of content that is fake, scope of encryption, content deemed interfering with politics and elections, spread of child abuse and revenge porn.
The Centre had carried out an exercise last year to determine whether blocking websites and apps was technically feasible, if telecom companies and online service providers were asked to do so. The issue is still being discussed. “Even the penalties we have under the IT Act are not sufficient,” another official said. “These need to be revised. Many global companies have high turnovers and relatively-small penalties may not be a sufficient deterrence. We are taking a cue from the penalty proposals in the data protection bill,” the official added.
Very little in IT law to tackle fake news, say experts
The data protection bill, finalised by the government, proposes the maximum penalty at Rs 15 crore or 4% of the worldwide turnover of the violator, whichever is higher.
Cyber law experts say that there is very little in the IT law to tackle the fake news phenomenon. “We do not have any law to take the companies to task on this issue. They can be proceeded against only under the Indian Penal Code provisions, and not as per the IT Act,” says Puneet Bhasin, a cyber law expert. “We do require stricter laws and effective enforcement, including having data localisation,” Bhasin adds.
Law and IT minister Ravi Shankar Prasad had told the Rajya Sabha in July last year that rules are required to ensure that internet platforms do not become vehicles to commit crime, incite hatred, provoke terrorism, extremism and promote moneylaundering.
The minister also said the government was looking at regulating the services of foreign internet companies operating in India to make them accountable to Indian laws and 

The SC’s offer to poor litigants is long overdue

Source: DNA dated 02.01.2018

It can be called a fine piece of judicial activism at the start of a New Year, one that was long overdue. An in-house study conducted by the Supreme Court Legal Services Committee (SCLSC), has concluded that poor litigants on the death row or those facing harsh punishments are not getting quality legal aid. In two recent judgments in December last month, the apex court, while commuting two capital punishments to life terms, took note of the poor socio-economic conditions of the two convicts. That the law is tilted heavily in favour of the rich, would be to state the obvious. The court, taking cognisance of this truism, quoted from the SCLSC report, which pointed out to “enormous delays in attending to cases of the poor and the needy.” Therefore, it makes 2019 a good year for such litigants, who need legal assistance, not just because they are poor, but also because they are not educated enough to know the pros and cons of their case. Quite correctly, the court observed that quality legal aid to the disadvantaged and weaker sections of society is an area that requires great and urgent attention. It needs no rocket science to know that the cost of litigation has been rising in India and as such, justice remains inaccessible for the underprivileged who are in no position to approach the courts. The National Legal Services Authority or NALSA was set up in 1987 precisely for this purpose, of providing free legal services to the weaker sections. Successive law ministers have flagged concerns about the high cost of litigation. Equally well known is the fact that leading advocates in the Supreme Court, high courts and district courts charge such exorbitant fees that it is beyond the reach of the underclass litigants. It makes the situation even more pronounced when a poor litigant is pitted against a rich opponent. It has generally been observed that in such cases, the result of the adjudication has gone against the lesser privileged litigant. The problem persists because big lawyers - many of them money spinning machines -  rarely, if ever, offer their services for such voluntary work. On occasions when they do, their performances are not as professional as when they charge their fat fees to appear in cases. The tragedy is that despite such awareness about the plight of poor litigants, not much has been done in this direction, apart from setting up the NALSA that has done commendable work, but falls far short of what is needed given the enormity of the problem. To that extent, the latest Supreme Court initiative needs to be applauded. Statistics compiled by the National Law University, Delhi, in its Death Penalty India Report based on interviews with 373 death row prisoners across the country, found that three-fourths of prisoners were economically vulnerable, with most of them being the sole or primary earners in their families. Even though Article 39 A of the Constitution promises free legal aid, its practical implications have proved to be something else.