Critical of the "unauthorised" release of tapes of his conversation with PR consultant Niira Radia, the US $ 73 billion Tata group chief Ratan Tata may move the Supreme Court on Monday to seek action against those behind the leak.
Tata may invoke Article 32 of the Constitution, claiming that his Right to Life, which includes right to privacy, has been breached by the leakage of these tapes. Under Article 32, any person who feels that his fundamental rights are violated can straightaway move the highest court of the country seeking redressal of the grievance.
The petition, where Union of India is sought to be made a respondent, seeks that responsibilities be fixed on who leaked the tapes -- recorded by the Income Tax authorities in 2008 and 2009 -- that were meant for investigation. Asked about the petition and its details, a Tata group spokesperson declined to comment.
Some of the conversations between Tata and Radia, whose PR firms have been engaged by the group, relate to personal details that could no way be part of investigation, Tata is expected to argue in the petition. In the wake of 2G spectrum allocation scam allegedly involving Rs 1.76 lakh crore, some magazines published taped conversations Niira had with politicians, journalists and industrialists.
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"I have listened to some of the tapes and you know I am not a Delhi resident... but I wonder to the great extent if other people's phones were tapped whether we would get similar kinds of conversation. I do not know if she has the power to influence the cabinet appointments or anything of this nature," Tata said.
Asked about who could be behind these, Tata said: "It could be enemies in the government, corporate rivals, I couldn't say. It is not a natural thing." He was responding to a question whether corporate rivals were behind the attack on Radia-led Vaishnavi Corporate Communications, which represents Tata Group firms.