Monday, November 29, 2010

Ratan Tata Radia tapes Court

Ratan Tata moves court against publication on Radia tapes

New Delhi, Nov 29 – TATA groups chairman Ratan Tata moved the Supreme Court Monday seeking restraint on the publication of transcripts pertaining to the phone intercepts of top corporate lobbyist Nira Radia related with the alleged 2G spectrum scam.

The petition was similar to what had been filed by Radia herself in the Delhi High Court that, in May, had declined a stay on the telecast of a similar set of intercepts by a TV cHANNEL on the ground that the people of the country had a right to know the truth.

Tata’s petition contended in the apex court that the publication of intercepts violated his right to privacy. The reference was to the transcript of 5,851 purported conversations Radia had with different people during the period the wiretap.

The calls were purportedly intercepted on the instruction of Income Tax Department after approval from the federal home ministry.

Tatas’s petition made the director of the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), the director general of Income Tax and Union of India respondents. At the same time, the government’s right to intercept telephone calls was not being questioned, he said.

Seeking action against the people who were responsible for leaking the transcripts, Tata said that the recorded conversations could have been used for investigations only and not for publication in media.

The government has, meanwhile, ordered an inquiry into who had leaked the tapes.

Senior counsel Prashant Bhushan, who appeared in tha apex court for the Centre for Public Interest Litigation, said that they were considering moving an application to oppose any such curbs on the publication of the transcripts.

Bhushan’s client is also seeking court monitoring of the investigation in the alleged scandal...

During the hearing of Radia’s petition in the Delhi High Court, Justice V.K. Shalli had observed that the people of India had the right to know the truth and the recordings were made by a government agency against which no challenge had been filed so far.

The ‘Radia tapes’, as intercepts are being called, refer to her conversations with then communications Minister A. Raja, some leading industrialists and journalists. The tapes were submitted as evidence in a litigation on the 2G spectrum row in the Supreme Court.

he tapes were made by the income tax department during investigations in 2008 and 2009 and number over 5,000 call recordings of Radia, who represented the Tata Group, Mukesh Ambani, the Congress Party and former telecoms minister A Raja. The Central Bureau of Investigations is currently examining the tapes, of which only roughly 104 are in the public domain, according to (news magazine) Tehlka

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