Journalists have the right to conceal and protect their sources in public interest but when it comes to national security, secrecy of sources cannot be of higher importance, Information and Broadcasting Minister Arun Jaitley today said.
Delivering the Sardar Patel Memorial Lecture here, he said a long-pending dispute or issue of debate is about the right of journalists regarding protecting their sources.
"I think the way courts world over have moved, is the correct direction. There is no fundamental right to conceal your sources but there is public interest which enables you to conceal your sources. And that public interest therefore will always have to be balanced with competing public interest," Jaitley, himself a lawyer of repute, said.
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That's how the trends of decision making world over is moving, he said.
In the lecture, Jaitley also referred to various other issues related to media including procedures of defamation.
Referring to the demand related to decriminalisation of defamation, he said that it has been seen that countries which have decriminalised it are the ones where the civil proceedings regarding such an offence are expeditious.
He also said with the advent of Internet, the situation has changed and any news published in one part of the globe can be read in another and various jurisdictions deal with defamatory content differently.