Secret documents published in past too, no threat of action, says N Ram

DAYS after Attorney General K K Venugopal contended in the Supreme Court that reports on the Rafale deal were based on documents stolen from the Ministry of Defence and threatened to invoke the Official Secrets Act against two publications, Chairman of The Hindu publishing group N Ram said secret documents have been published by Indian newspapers in the past without threat of action under the 1923 law.

DAYS after Attorney General K K Venugopal contended in the Supreme Court that reports on the Rafale deal were based on documents stolen from the Ministry of Defence and threatened to invoke the Official Secrets Act against two publications, Chairman of The Hindu publishing group N Ram said secret documents have been published by Indian newspapers in the past without threat of action under the 1923 law.

Calling the Official Secrets Act an “obnoxious piece of legislation” used by colonial rulers against the freedom struggle, Ram said it has rarely been used against publications. “Any number of secret documents have been published in the past. In 1981, I was the Washington correspondent of The Hindu and we published many secret papers where India was involved in negotiations with the International Monetary Fund on what was then the largest multilateral line of credit in history, about $6.3 billion at that time. Nobody spoke about using the Official Secrets Act… On Bofors, we published 250 documents including many government documents. Nobody spoke about using the Official Secrets Act against the publications,” he said.

Lawyer Prashant Bhushan has also submitted secret papers to the courts, for example on the coal block allocation scandal, he said. “The courts had no hesitation in looking at it. Nobody thought of using the Official Secrets Act against Prashant Bhushan. The first time it happened was in the Supreme Court,” Ram said.

Speaking about the contentions by the Attorney General about documents being stolen, Ram said what was laying out was a “tragicomedy” of sorts. “Because they say stolen papers, and people think it has been physically stolen. Now they say photocopies were made… I think it has become a bit of an embarrassment for the government.”

He was speaking to journalists after making a presentation titled ‘Rafale: Modi’s Nemesis?’ at the third edition of the Mumbai Collective, a platform for discussions on liberal, secular policy and Constitutional rights of freedom and inclusion.

Newsletter

Prime Minister Modi inaugurates Atal Tunnel - longest tunnel above 10000 ft

Ladakh: The Prime Minister today inaugurated the Atal Tunnel and took the inaugural drive through in the 9km long tunnel...

Orissa High Court Order regarding migrant workers entry into Orissa put on hold by the Supreme Court

The Orissa High Court order to permit the entry of migrant workers only if they tested Negative for COVID-19 was put on...

Coronavirus Lockdown - First Flights To Bring Back Indians Stranded Abroad Land In Kerala

On Monday, the central government announced plans to begin a massive repatriation of its citizens stranded abroad, dubbe...

Reacting to Trump's retaliation threat India allows Hydroxychloroquine export

In a move after Trump's threat to retaliate if India fails to send medicines, India has lifted ban of export of ess...

All Domestic Passenger Flights Suspended from Midnight Tomorrow

The operations of all domestic schedule commercial airlines will stop operations from 23.59pm on March 24, a government...

Iran says it ‘unintentionally’ shot down Ukrainian plane, blames ‘human error’

Iran had denied for several days that a missile downed the aircraft. But then the US and Canada, citing intelligence, sa...