'Officials concerned will be arrested if the apex court order of March 24, 2015 scrapping the provision of the IT Act is enforced', said an SC bench.
The
Supreme Court on Monday sought the Centre's response on a plea
alleging prosecutions even after the apex court scrapped Section
66 A of the IT Act under which a person could be arrested for
posting offensive content on websites.
A
bench headed by Justice R F Nariman said concerned officials will be
arrested and sent to jail if the apex court order of March 24, 2015
scrapping the provision of the IT Act is violated.
Appearing
for the NGO PUCL, advocate Sanjay Parikh said more than 22 people
have been arrested under the provision of the IT
Act scrapped by the top court in 2015.
Terming
liberty of thought and expression cardinal, a bench of Justices J
Chelameswar and R.F, Nariman said in 2015, The public's right to know
is directly affected by Section 66A of the Information Technology
Act.
The
first PIL on the issue was filed in 2012 by law student Shreya
Singhal who sought an amendment in Section 66A of the Act after two
girls Shaheen Dhada and Rinu Shrinivasan were arrested in Palghar in
Maharashtra's Thane district. While one posted a comment against the
shutdown in Mumbai following Shiv Sena leader Bal Thackeray's death,
the other liked' it.
In
the wake of numerous complaints of harassment and arrests, the apex
court on May 16, 2013 came out with an advisory that a person,
accused of posting objectionable comments on social networking sites,
cannot be arrested without police getting permission from senior
officers like an IG or DCP.
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