New Delhi: In a fresh twist to the"snoopgate" episode, the woman who was tailed by Gujarat police allegedly on the orders of chief minister Narendra Modi, on Tuesday moved the Supreme Court along with her father for restraining the Centre and state government from going ahead with their commissions of inquiry.
The joint-petition filed by them was mentioned before a bench comprising justices Ranjana Prakash Desai and N.V. Ramana, which said it cannot pass an interim order for staying proceedings without hearing the parties.
The bench issued notices to Centre and Gujarat government seeking their replies for hearing on Friday. The petition has also sought protection of their fundamental right to privacy and right to live with dignity. The apex court also requested the media not to make public the name of the woman.
A controversy broke out last year when two news portals released CDs of purported telephonic conversations between Narendra Modi and his aide Amit Shah, who was then Gujarat"™s home minister, and two top state police officials relating to snooping on a woman architect in 2009. The conversations, purportedly between August and September 2009, do not specifically mention Modi by name but refers to a"saheb", which the portals claimed was the Gujarat chief minister at whose instance the snooping was done, a charge denied by Shah.
While the Gujarat government constituted an inquiry commission in November last year, the Union Cabinet also decided to follow suit.
However, a major controversy broke out when last week, senior ministers announced that the name of the judge to head the commission would be announced.
But on Monday, Centre beat a retreat after two allies of the Congress objected to such a move in the"dying days" of UPA 2.