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New Delhi: Communications, Electronics & Information Technology minister Ashwini Vaishnaw has emphatically denied all charges of snooping as false and baseless. 

In a statement in the Lok Sabha in the Pegasus Project, Mr Vaishnaw requested all members of House to examine issues on facts and logic. He said, the basis of this report is that there is a consortium that has got access to a leaked database of 50,000 phone numbers. He said, the allegation is that individuals linked to these phone numbers for being spied upon.
 
The minister, However, said the report says that the presence of a phone number in the data does not reveal whether a device was infected by Pegasus or subjected to an attempted hack. Mr Vaishnaw



said, without subjecting the phone to this technical analysis, it's not possible to conclusively state whether it witnessed an attempted hack or successfully compromised. 

He said, the report itself clarifies that presence of a number in list doesn't amount to snooping. The minister also questioned the timing of this story in a website on the eve of the Monsoon session of Parliament.
 
Mr Vaishnaw said, any form of illegal surveillance isn't possible with checks and balances in our laws and robust institutions. He said, in India, there's a well-established procedure through which lawful interception of electronic communication is carried out for purpose of national security.



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