IANS/New Delhi

The government should book Google for “violating” India’s defence regulations on maps and force the company to surrender its “illegally stored” data to the Surveyor General of India, opposition MP Tarun Vijay says.

“Getting every inch of India mapped by illegally inviting people to send the data for their US-based servers presents a grave danger to the security and poses a challenge to the Indian state,” the Bharatiya Janata Party leader said concerning Google’s Mapathon 2013 exercise.

Mapathon 2013 - which started last month and culminates today - is an India-wide mapping contest by Google with prizes for top mappers. Google Maps users from all over the country have been invited “to help create better maps for India” by adding knowledge of their neighbourhoods through the Google map maker.

Vijay said Google had broken the statutory norms by running a Map India campaign without permission.

“The Mapathon activity by Google Maps is in contravention of the National Map Policy and map restriction policies issued by the defence ministry from time to time,” he said.

Vijay said that the Surveyor General of India (SOI) alone was mandated to undertake “restricted” category survey, mapping and disseminating India’s topographic map database.

The MP said the defence ministry has identified and prepared a list of civil and military Vital Areas (VAs)/Vital Points (VPs) in consultation with the home ministry and this was regularly updated.

“From the national security point of view, these VAs/VPs cannot be shown in the maps/data published in the public domain as Google is doing,” he said.

Calling for tough action, he said Google should be taught to respect India’s laws.

“Restrict them, invoke the relevant law to book a case against them, interrogate their CEO in India and make them surrender all data illegally stored to the Survey of India. The law must prevail, however influential such agencies might be,” Vijay said.

At the same time, the MP said that Google had done a great service to mapping the world over and had changed the way people used maps or located places.

“Still, the Indian state can’t be dwarfed by a US-based agency whose operations are not under our control. People can be involved, but with the active monitoring by the Survey of India alone so that the sensitive maps can be identified and kept out of the public domain,” he said.

Asked about his meeting with Defence Minister A K Antony earlier in the week during which he had demanded an inquiry into the issue, Vijay said he had been told the Survey of India had taken up the matter with Google.