The petition of Mr Venkatesh Nayak Vs Union of India (WP-C-177/2026) along with the following writ petitions will come up for hearing on 13th May 2026 at the Honourable Supreme Court.
- W.P.(C) No. 212/2026 (PIL-W) (IA No. 51893/2026 – STAY APPLICATION)-National Campaign for Peoples Right to Information
- W.P.(C) No. 211/2026 (X) (IA No. 51414/2026 – GRANT OF INTERIM RELIEF and IA No. 51415/2026 – PERMISSION TO FILE SYNOPSIS AND LIST OF DATES)-Reporter’s Collective-
- W.P.(C) No. 286/2026 (PIL-W) (IA No. 68833/2026 – STAY APPLICATION)-
- W.P.(C) No. 275/2026 (PIL-W) (IA No. 66957/2026 – EX-PARTE AD-INTERIM RELIEF)
Additionally IA No.85635/2026 filed on behalf of FDPPI will also be considered. In the last hearing on 23rd March 2026, the Government was asked to file it’s reply to the petitions so that counters could be filed by other parties.
The four petitions together have serious prayers including scrapping of DPDPA and DPDPA Rule and are argued by a battery of well known advocates including the following:
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- Ms. Indira Jaising, Sr. Adv. Ms. Mishi Chaudhary, Adv. Mr. Paras Nath Singh, AOR Mr. Prasanth Sugathan, Adv. Mr. Jayant Malik, Adv. Mr. Kabir Darshan Singh, Adv. Mr. Syed Mohammad Haroon, Adv. Mr. Sadeeq Ur Rahman, Adv. Mr. Abhishek Manu Singhvi, Sr. Adv. Muhammad Ali Khan, Adv.
- Mr. Omar Gupta, Adv. Ms. Eesha Bakshi, Adv. Mr. Uday Bhatia, Adv. Mr. Naman Basoya, Adv. Mr. Abishek Jebaraj, AOR A. Reyna Shruti, Adv. Mr. D.P. Singh, Adv. Mr. Prashant Bhushan, AOR Ms. Cheryl D’Souza, Adv. Ms. Anushka Singh,
- Adv. Ms. Vrinda Grover, Adv. Mr. Soutik Banerjee, Adv. Ms. Devika Tulsiani, Adv. Mr. Aakarsh Kamra, AOR Mr. Pritam Singh, Adv. Mr. Umesh Kumar Shukla, Adv. Mr. Shishupal Singh, Adv. Mr. Vedprakash, Adv. Mr. Ankit Bhatnagar, Adv. Mr. Praharsh Chaudhary,
- Adv. Mr. Pawan Kumar Saxena, Adv. Mr. Balajee D. K., Adv. Dr. Mahendra Limaye, Adv. Dr. Tushar Mandlekar, Adv. Mr. Alok Sharma, Adv. Mr. Anand Dubey, Adv. Mr. Raghvendra Kumar, AOR Ms. Harsha Sharma, Adv.
- For Respondent(s) the case will be argued by:
- Mr. Tushar Mehta, Solicitor General Mr. Gurmeet Singh Makker, AOR Mr. Madhav Sinhal, Adv. Mr. Rajat Nair, Adv. Mrs. Shilpa Ohri, Adv. Mr. Mayank Pandey, Adv. Mr. Chander Uday Singh, Sr. Adv. Ms. Cheryl D’souza, Adv. Ms. Bidya Mohanty, Adv. Katyayani Suhrud, Adv. Mr. Abhishek K., Adv. Ms. Anushka Singh, Adv.
For the Intervention petition of FDPPI, (IA No.85635/2026), following advocates will appear.
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- Dr. Mahendra L.,
- Adv. Dr. Tushar Mandlekar, Adv.
- Mr. Alok Sharma,
- Adv. Mr. Raghvendra Kumar,
- AOR Mr. Devvrat Singh, Adv.
The Bench headed by the honourable Chief Justice along with JUSTICE JOYMALYA BAGCHI HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE VIPUL M. PANCHOLI will hear the case.
The prayers in the three petitions filed by Mr Venkatesh Nayak, Reporter’s Guild and Geeta Seshu are as follows:
Venkatesh Nayak Prayers
In light of the facts and circumstances stated hereinabove, it is most humbly prayed that this Hon’ble Court may be pleased to:
- Direct that the operation of Section 44(3) of The Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023, shall be stayed during the pendency of the captioned proceeding
Reporter’s Guild Prayers
It is respectfully prayed that this Hon’ble Court may kindly be pleased to:
- Issue a writ in the nature of mandamus, or any other appropriate writ, order, or direction declaring the whole of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023, and specifically Sections 5, 6, 8, 10, 17, 18, 19, 36, and 44(3), of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023, to be void, inoperative and unconstitutional for being ultra vires Articles 14, 19, and 21 of the Constitution;
- Issue a writ in the nature of mandamus, or any other appropriate writ, order, or direction declaring the whole of the Digital Personal Data Protection Rules, 2025, specifically Rules 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 13, 16, 17, and 23 of the Digital Personal Data Protection Rules, 2025, to be void, inoperative and unconstitutional for being ultra vires Articles 14, 19, and 21 of the Constitution;
- Issue any other writ, order or direction as this Hon’ble Court may deem fit and proper to do complete justice in the circumstances of the case.
Prayers of Geeta Seshu
It is prayed that this Hon’ble Court may be pleased:
- Issue an appropriate writ, order or direction or declaration quashing and setting aside Sections 7, 17(2)(a), 19(3) 24, 36, 44(2)(a), and 44(3) of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023, to the extent challenged herein, as being unconstitutional, void and inoperative, and violative of Articles 14, 19(1)(a), 19(1)(g), 21 and 21A of the Constitution of India.
- Issue an appropriate writ, order or direction, or declaration quashing and setting aside Rules 5, 6, 17, 18, 21 and 23, and the Second Schedule, Fifth Schedule, Sixth Schedule and Seventh Schedule of the Digital Personal Data Protection Rules, 2025, to the extent challenged herein, as being unconstitutional, void and inoperative, and violative of Articles 14, 19(1)(a), 19(1)(g), 21 and 21A of the Constitution of India.
- Issue an appropriate writ, order or direction, or declaration quashing and setting aside Section 17(2) of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023, insofar as it empowers the Central Government to exempt any of its instrumentalities from the application of the provisions of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 and the Digital Personal Data Protection Rules, 2025. d) Issue an appropriate writ, order or direction, or declaration quashing and setting aside the Second Schedule of the Digital Personal Data Protection Rules, 2025.
- Issue an appropriate writ, order or direction, or declaration quashing and setting aside the Second Schedule of the Digital Personal Data Protection Rules, 2025.
- Issue an appropriate writ, order or direction, or declaration quashing and setting aside Section 44(2)(a) of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023, insofar as extinguishes the right of affected persons to seek compensation or civil remedy for unlawful processing of personal data and/or data breach.
- Issue an appropriate writ, order or direction, or declaration quashing and setting aside Section 44(3) of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 insofar as it dilutes the right to information of the citizens of India.
- Issue an appropriate writ, order or direction, or declaration quashing and setting aside Section 19(3) and Section 24 of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 read with Rules 17, 18 and 21 and the Fifth and Sixth Schedules of the Digital Personal Data Protection Rules, 2025, insofar as they relate to the constitution, appointment, service conditions and functioning of the Data Protection Board of India.
- Issue an appropriate writ, order or direction, or declaration directing the Respondent No. 1 to frame a constitutionally compliant mechanism for appointment, tenure and service conditions of the Data Protection Board of India, ensuring its independence from executive control.
- Issue an appropriate writ, order or direction, or declaration quashing and setting aside Section 36 of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 read with Rule 23 and the Serial No. 1 of the Seventh Schedule of the Digital Personal Data Protection Rules, 2025.
- Issue an appropriate writ, order or direction, or declaration directing the Respondent No. 1 to incorporate and notify a specific and proportionate exemption under the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 and the Digital Personal Data Protection Rules, 2025 for processing personal data for journalistic, editorial, investigative and public interest reporting purposes, including protection of journalistic sources. Alternatively, issue an appropriate writ, order or direction, or declaration quashing and setting aside Section 7 of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023, insofar as it fails to provide an exemption for processing of personal data for journalistic purposes .
FDPPI has already filed an initial request for intervention
Naavi’s views on this regard which is in public domain is available here.
Naavi has also provided a list of suggestions to make DPDPA acceptable to all including the petitioners.
In a nutshell Naavi has expressed the view
a) That the objections raised are borne out of mis-reading of the Act and the Rules
b) That the objections raised are not tenable and do not indicate any constitutional crisis.
c) That some clarifications can be issued by the Government to ally the disproportionate fears expressed by the petitioners.
Under no circumstances, we feel that the Act and the Rules should be scrapped.
Naavi has also indicated that DPDPA 2023 does not claim to protect the Privacy Right and only provides a scheme for enforcement of protection of Personal Data along with an administrative penalty. It leaves ITA 2000 and other laws to work along with DPDPA 2023 to provide relief to the data principals. It also leaves the right to enforce the constitutional right to Privacy outside the reliefs granted by DPDPA 2023 (Which is only related to disciplinary action against Data Fiduciaries in tact. Naavi has also indicated that this is the same principle adopted by GDPR also for the EU region.
We await the further developments.
Naavi










