We will see a very contemporary, global standard set of laws: MoS Rajeev Chandrasekhar
The discussion was about data governance in India at the US Chamber of Commerce event
Chandrasekhar added that the government would conduct multiple rounds of public and stakeholder consultation before tabling the data protection bill again
The final version of the Information Technology (IT) Rules, 2021, with the new legislation is set to come soon, the Minister of State for Electronics and IT Rajeev Chandrasekhar said while speaking at the India Ideas Summit organised by the US-India Business Council recently.
“We will see a very contemporary, very global standard set of laws that enable our trillion-dollar goal, the Prime Minister’s techade vision and protect the rights and interests of all Indian citizens. You will see that at the earliest,” the minister of state said while speaking with CNBC-TV18 post the event’s conclusion.
The discussion was about data governance in India at the US Chamber of Commerce event.
“These new laws, in a sense, supersede existing legislation. So, the Digital India Act will clearly supersede the IT Act. There is no question of both of them existing. If there are any contradictions with the existing and legacy laws, we will get them amended,” Chandrasekhar said.
The government is making the proposed amendments and will be looking to bring the new legislation as soon as possible, the minister of state noted. Chandrasekhar added that the government would conduct multiple rounds of public and stakeholder consultation before tabling the data protection bill again in the parliament.
Speaking about multiple requests made by foreign stakeholders for India to relax its data laws, Chandrasekhar added, “We know what our national interests are, we know what is required for us to grow our economy into a trillion-dollar digital economy and there will be some counterbalancing interests from other countries. We will talk to those; our interests are not very different from what the US wants.”
The comments come after Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman stated that India’s data protection law will be coming soon. She stated that the minister of electronics and IT Ashwini Vaishnaw is working ‘very diligently’ to formulate the new data protection norms, as part of the amendments within the larger IT rules.
India had pulled the old proposal earlier this year. The Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019 was introduced in Parliament in December 2019.
In December 2021, a draft Data Protection Bill, 2021 was tabled in Lok Sabha. The government’s move attracted much criticism from the industry, with many experts speculating a delay in bringing new legislation in place.
Meanwhile, the IT rules themselves have faced scrutiny from stakeholders from both India and overseas. Interestingly, the US-India Business Council, the host of the event where both Chandrasekhar and Sitharaman spoke, raised concerns about the amendments in the IT rules back in July.
Specifically, the USIBC raised concerns about the formation of the Grievance Appellate Committee and how it would operate independently if the government was involved in creating the committee.