Law Minister T B Jayachandra said the existing Acts referred only to the national flag.
"But whether the state should have a flag or not is a grey area," he told reporters after a cabinet meeting here.
The Karnataka government has formed a nine-member committee to submit a report on designing a flag for the state and "providing a legal standing for it", an official said yesterday.
Jayachandra said the committee would weigh the pros and cons of having such a flag, but stressed the state wanted to be in the "mainstream" and did not want any "controversy".
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Referring to the Prevention of Insults to National Honour Act, 1971; Emblems and Names (Prevention of Improper Use) Act, 1950 and Flag Code of India, the law minister said these Acts were for the national flag.
The minister clarified that the issue didnot come up for discussion at today's cabinet meeting.
Defending the move, Karnataka Chief MinisterSiddaramaiah had yesterday asked if there was anyprovision in the Constitution which prohibited states fromhaving their own flags.
A Union home ministry official said in New Delhi yesterday there was no legal bar on a state having a separate flag but it would represent the people and not the government and said India as a nation had only one flag.
Stating that the committee would look into all aspects, Jayachandra said, "We want to be in themainstream; we don't want to get involved in controversy."
"Whether it (flag) is needed or not is a policymatter, the pros and cons will be looked into by the committee before giving its report to the government," hesaid.
To a question on whether the pros and cons had not considered before the committee was set up, Jayachandra said discussions had happened at the departmental level and he would go through them in detail.
If Karnataka eventually decides to have a separate flag, it would be the only state to do so after Jammu and Kashmir, which enjoys a special status under Article 370 of the Constitution.
Puttappa and Gadada in their representation hadrequested the government to design a separate flag for'Kannada Naadu' and accord it legal standing.
The Siddaramaiah government's move to form a committee is being considered as a departure from the stand taken by the earlier BJP government.
The Sadananda Gowda-led BJP government had in 2012 informed the Karnataka High Court that it had not accepted suggestions to declare the bi-colour 'Kannada flag' as thestate's official flag, as having a separate flag would be "against the unity and integrity of the country".