The Supreme Court will pronounce judgment on Wednesday on a batch of petitions seeking court-monitored probe into the alleged Pegasus snooping matter.
On September 23, the top court had indicated that it may set up a technical committee to probe the allegations of snooping by using the Pegasus spyware on journalists, activists etc.
A bench headed by Chief Justice N.V. Ramana had orally told senior advocate C.U. Singh, who is appearing for one of the petitioners in Pegasus matter, that some experts have expressed their inability to join the probe due to personal reasons and an order on the committee is expected soon.
The CJI had said that the court wanted to pass orders this week, however, the order was deferred as some members, who the court had wanted to be part of the technical committee, had expressed personal difficulties to be on the committee.
"That is why it is taking time to constitute the technical expert committee," he said, adding that the court will finalise the members of the technical committee soon.
Examining snooping allegations
The Centre had already proposed to constitute an expert panel, composed of independent members, to examine the snooping allegations. It had said this committee can submit its report to the top court.
On September 13, the Centre had told the Supreme Court it does not wish to file a detailed affidavit now clarifying whether Pegasus spyware was used or not, in its response to a batch of petitions seeking independent probe into the alleged snooping.
Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, representing the Centre, had submitted before the top court that the government will disclose all details in connection with the Pegasus case before a panel of domain experts but not on an affidavit for national security reasons.
Mehta emphasised that there are terror organizations, which better not know which software is used to combat terror etc. "It has its own pitfalls", he added.
(With inputs from IANS)