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‘Congress making mountain out of a molehill’: Arun Jaitley defends govt’s order on interception of information on computer

‘Congress making mountain out of a molehill’: Arun Jaitley defends govt’s order on interception of information on computer

Defending the Central government’s order on monitoring and intercepting information on any computer resource, Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on Friday said that it was a mere repetition of an order of authorisation issued under rules framed during the UPA regime in 2009.

Speaking on the issue in Rajya Sabha, Jaitley accused the Congress of playing with the security of the country and making “a mountain where even a molehill does not exist.”

“On December 20, the same order of authorisation was repeated that was existing since 2009,” Jaitley told the Upper House.

On Thursday, the Home Ministry authorised ten central security and intelligence agencies including the IB and RAW and Delhi Police to intercept, monitor and decrypt any information generated, transmitted, received or stored in any computer resource under the Information and Technology Act, 2000.

The minister also responded to remarks of Congress leader Anand Sharma made outside the House in which he had accused the government of making the country a surveillance state.

“And what you are doing, Anand Sharma, is making a mountain where even a molehill does not exist.”

Jaitley said the NDA government has used the same rules which were made by the UPA government in 2009 for agencies concerning issues of national security.

To this Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad said that he has a copy of the order of the Ministry of Home Affairs and added “nowhere in the order national security has been mentioned”.

Jaitley replied that “It (national security) is mentioned in section 69. And you are playing with the security of the country. That is what you have done just now.”

Earlier, Sharma had said the government was creating a surveillance state and its order was “an ultimate assault on the fundamental rights and Right to Privacy.”

The Congress leader said that the order was also in direct conflict with the Supreme Court judgement that “right to privacy is a fundamental right”.

“We collectively oppose it (the government move). This gives unlimited powers to all these agencies to monitor every information,” Sharma said.

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