New Delhi: Congress on Tuesday increased his attack on the government for Pegasus’s controversy peering and demanded investigations by the Joint Parliament Committee.
The opposition party along with other parties also jammed the process of both parliamentary houses while raising problems.
Opposition members rode upset in both houses and demanded a thorough investigation into accusations of reconnaissance in journalists, politicians, ministers, judges and other people using spyware pegasus Israel.
The leaders of various political parties also met before the process of the process in both parliamentary houses to decide on their strategy on this problem.
Some of them also gave notice of delays in both houses that demanded discussions about this issue.
Shaktisinh Gehil Congress spokesman said the government must clearly say whether it has bought pegasus spyware or not and conducted a shared parliament investigation.
“We have notified delays in both Rajya Sabha and Lok Sabha to hold discussions about violations of national security and fundamental rights under the constitution of the problem of telephone tapping,” said Gohil to reporters.
He said the party’s request was that the government had to order the probe of the common parliamentary committee into the problem of surveillance and telephone tapping.
“The minister, who tried to create confusion about this problem had to answer clearly whether the government had purchased spyware pegasus or not.
If yes, the government must order an investigation of the common parliamentary committee to investigate all problems,” he said.
The government on Monday was decisively rejected on the allegations of Lok Sabha about the reconnaissance of politicians, journalists and others using Pegasus software, confirming that illegal supervision was not possible with the examination and balance in the state law, and accused that the effort was made to slander democracy India.
An international media consortium reported on Sunday that more than 300 cell phone numbers were verified, including two ministers, more than 40 journalists, three opposition leaders and one judge sitting in addition to a number of business people and activists in India can be targeted to hack through spyware.