prasad1
Active member
The Pegasus leak is not the first time that we have learned that Indian dissidents, journalists and opposition politicians are being spied on. It is not the first time that phones have been tapped in India, and it is certainly not the first time that the finger of suspicion has pointed to agencies of the union government. Nevertheless, it counts as a new and disturbing development.
Paranoid elected autocrats from Mrs Gandhi onwards have misused the intelligence services to spy on their opponents. A famous report from the Central Intelligence Bureau in 1991 revealed that Rajiv Gandhi's government had been tapping the phones of not just some of his own ministers, like Arif Mohammed Khan and K C Pant, but a long list of opposition leaders. A R Antulay, who as Chief Minister of Maharashtra likely ordered opposition leaders' phones to be tapped, was in turn being spied on by the union government. M G Ramachandran was apparently tapping the phones not just of M Karunanidhi and M K Stalin, but even of his protégé, J Jayalalithaa. Multiple agencies of the union government are empowered to tap phones - and, under the United Progressive Alliance government, we know that some of those conversations were selectively leaked to the media in order to tarnish the reputations of those being recorded. And there were even allegations that senior cabinet members in UPA-II were tapping each others' phones, which is quite in keeping with the overall ethos of that confused period in our history.
www.ndtv.com
Paranoid elected autocrats from Mrs Gandhi onwards have misused the intelligence services to spy on their opponents. A famous report from the Central Intelligence Bureau in 1991 revealed that Rajiv Gandhi's government had been tapping the phones of not just some of his own ministers, like Arif Mohammed Khan and K C Pant, but a long list of opposition leaders. A R Antulay, who as Chief Minister of Maharashtra likely ordered opposition leaders' phones to be tapped, was in turn being spied on by the union government. M G Ramachandran was apparently tapping the phones not just of M Karunanidhi and M K Stalin, but even of his protégé, J Jayalalithaa. Multiple agencies of the union government are empowered to tap phones - and, under the United Progressive Alliance government, we know that some of those conversations were selectively leaked to the media in order to tarnish the reputations of those being recorded. And there were even allegations that senior cabinet members in UPA-II were tapping each others' phones, which is quite in keeping with the overall ethos of that confused period in our history.

Opinion: The Lack Of Public Outrage On Pegasus Says A Lot About India Right Now
It is not the first time that phones have been tapped in India, and it is certainly not the first time that the finger of suspicion has pointed to agencies of the union government. Nevertheless, it counts as a new and disturbing development.
