Dar Mohamad Ayub, Wani Shahnawaz Ahmad
Department of Law, Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, Uttar Pradesh India.
Department of Biosciences. Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi, India.
Asian Bioeth Rev. 2022 Oct 27;15(2):125-140. doi: 10.1007/s41649-022-00227-0. eCollection 2023 Apr.
The corona pandemic altered many traditional and historical norms of society and law. COVID-19 created a humanitarian crisis in some parts of globe, while pandemic privacy and civil liberties were under threat all over world. To combat the deadly virus, individual liberty and equality were compromised. This paper focuses on how India's health problem has compromised people's right to privacy. It will highlight how strict executive policies led to the creation of a massive surveillance system in the name of combating the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as how the absence of any policy or legal framework led to the exclusion of individuals and their families who were suspected of having the virus or caring for those who were infected with the deadly virus. The paper uses case studies and data collected from primary as well as secondary sources. The authors will also point out how the absence of privacy regulation puts millions of citizens' private information at risk of being compromised or exploited against their will.
新冠疫情改变了许多传统和历史的社会及法律规范。新冠病毒在全球一些地区引发了人道主义危机,而疫情期间的隐私和公民自由在全世界都受到了威胁。为了抗击这种致命病毒,个人自由和平等受到了损害。本文聚焦于印度的健康问题是如何损害了人们的隐私权。它将突出严格的行政政策如何以抗击新冠疫情之名导致了大规模监控系统的建立,以及缺乏任何政策或法律框架如何导致了对疑似感染病毒或照顾感染致命病毒者的个人及其家人的排斥。本文使用了案例研究以及从一手和二手资料收集的数据。作者还将指出隐私监管的缺失如何使数百万公民的私人信息面临违背其意愿而被泄露或利用的风险。