ETV Bharat / state

SC refuses to put stay on installation of CCTV cameras in Delhi govt schools

The Supreme Court refused to put an interim stay on Delhi government's decision to install CCTV cameras in government schools. The petition was filed by a law student from the National Law University who claimed that the installation of CCTV cameras can violate students' fundamental right to privacy.

SC refuses to put stay on installation of CCTV cameras in govt schools
author img

By

Published : Jul 12, 2019, 11:59 PM IST

New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Friday once again refused to put an interim stay on the installation of CCTV cameras in government schools in Delhi.

A bench of Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi, Justice Deepak Gupta, and Justice Aniruddha Bose had earlier in May 2019 refused to pass an interim order to stay the Delhi government's decision to install 1.5 lakh CCTV cameras and issued a notice to the government.

Petitioner Amber Tickoo, a third-year law student at the National Law University, with the help of advocate Jai Dehadrai had sought directions to the government to install CCTV cameras in classrooms and live-streaming the feeds to the parents of the children.

The petitioner told the court that the government did not take the permission of parents and teachers before taking the decision and submitted that the cameras would "live-stream footage of adolescent students to random strangers".

"Providing a live feed to anyone with a user ID and password jeopardizes the safety and security of young girls...and shall directly give rise to incidents of stalking and voyeurism," the petition said.

The government's move violates the fundamental right to privacy, it argued.

"The decision was in direct contravention to the verdict of the Supreme Court which has unequivocally upheld that Right to Privacy is a fundamental right under Article 21 of the Constitution of India," the petition added.

It added that no steps have been taken to protect the data recorded by the CCTV cameras and the data is prone to hacking and poses a serious threat to the privacy and security of the children as well as teachers.

Also read: HIV-positive boy denied admission in TN govt school; Education dept orders probe

New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Friday once again refused to put an interim stay on the installation of CCTV cameras in government schools in Delhi.

A bench of Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi, Justice Deepak Gupta, and Justice Aniruddha Bose had earlier in May 2019 refused to pass an interim order to stay the Delhi government's decision to install 1.5 lakh CCTV cameras and issued a notice to the government.

Petitioner Amber Tickoo, a third-year law student at the National Law University, with the help of advocate Jai Dehadrai had sought directions to the government to install CCTV cameras in classrooms and live-streaming the feeds to the parents of the children.

The petitioner told the court that the government did not take the permission of parents and teachers before taking the decision and submitted that the cameras would "live-stream footage of adolescent students to random strangers".

"Providing a live feed to anyone with a user ID and password jeopardizes the safety and security of young girls...and shall directly give rise to incidents of stalking and voyeurism," the petition said.

The government's move violates the fundamental right to privacy, it argued.

"The decision was in direct contravention to the verdict of the Supreme Court which has unequivocally upheld that Right to Privacy is a fundamental right under Article 21 of the Constitution of India," the petition added.

It added that no steps have been taken to protect the data recorded by the CCTV cameras and the data is prone to hacking and poses a serious threat to the privacy and security of the children as well as teachers.

Also read: HIV-positive boy denied admission in TN govt school; Education dept orders probe

Intro:The Supreme Court today refused to stay the installation of CCTV cameras and streaming of CCTV footage in schools administred by the Delhi government. The bench comprising Chief Justice of India , Ranjan Gogoi, Deepak Gupta and Aniruddha Bose was hearing the matter today.


Body:A PIL was filed by Amber Tickoo, a law student, at National University. The petitioner contended that the installation of cctv cameras in classrooms would violate the fundamental right of privacy as laid down in the Justice Puttaswamy case.

The Delhi government's decision would allow persons with valid username and password to access the live feed of the CCTV cameras in classrooms. The petitioner has argued that this could seriously jeopardise the safety and security of the children.


Conclusion:
ETV Bharat Logo

Copyright © 2024 Ushodaya Enterprises Pvt. Ltd., All Rights Reserved.