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Privacy is a fundamental right, declares SC:
Context
- Privacy is vital to life and liberty and an inherent part of the fundamental rights enshrined in the Constitution was declared by a nine-judge Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court in a unanimous verdict.
The court’s decision
- The court held that privacy is a natural right present in human beings.
- The state does not confer natural rights on citizens. Natural rights like privacy exist equally in all individuals, irrespective of class, strata, gender or orientation.
- “Privacy is the constitutional core of human dignity. Privacy ensures the fulfilment of dignity,” Justice D.Y. Chandrachud wrote.
Arguments by Centre
- The Centre had debated against the recognition of privacy as a fundamental right.
- It had guaranteed the court that privacy would be protected through parliamentary statutes.
Court’s response
- But the court countered that statutory laws “can be made and also unmade by a simple parliamentary majority.”
- “The ruling party can, at will, do away with any or all of the protections contained in the statutes.”
- Fundamental rights are rights citizens may enjoy despite the governments they elect,” Justice Rohinton F. Nariman explained in his separate judgment.
- The court chided the Centre for describing right to privacy as an “elitist construct.”
- The court maintained that privacy was the concern of a few, while schemes like Aadhaar, which require citizens to part with their biometric details to the state, reduce corruption and benefit millions of poor.
- The refrain that the poor need no civil and political rights and are concerned only with economic well-being has been utilized through history to wreak the most egregious violations of human rights.
- It is privacy, as an intrinsic and core feature of life and personal liberty, which enables individuals to stand up against a programme of forced sterilization.
- It is the right to question, scrutinize, dissent which enables an informed citizenry to scrutinize the actions of government.
Not an absolute right
- However, the court held that privacy is not an absolute right.
- The government can introduce a law which “intrudes” into privacy for public and legitimate state reasons.
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