A bench of Justice Dipak Misra and R Banumathi asked the Centre to convene a meeting of technical experts and the search engines within 10 days to explore ways to block such advertisements.
"They are patently violating the Indian law and are saying that they cannot do anything. It is not acceptable and this needs to be controlled. They can't put anything which is against the law of the country," the bench said.
It directed the Centre to hold the meeting and also allow the petitioner, Dr Sabu Mathew George, to participate in it. George has filed the PIL seeking court's intervention in view of decreasing number of girl child in the country.
During the hearing, Solicitor General Ranjit Kumar said that companies were violating the PCPNDT Act by displaying advertisements on sex determination on their websites.
Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques (PCPNDT) Act, 1994 was enacted to stop female foeticides and arrest the declining sex ratio in India. It banned pre-natal sex determination.
The apex court had in January last year directed the
search engines like Google India, Yahoo India and Microsoft Corporation(I)Pvt Ltd to strictly comply with Indian laws and block advertisements on sex determination of a foetus.
If any advertisement existed on any search engine, these should be "withdrawn forthwith" by the search engines, the apex court had said categorically.
It had asked two joint secretaries and one additional secretary of Union Health Ministry to convene a meeting of senior officials of Uttar Pradesh, Haryana and National Capital Territory Delhi to check "relevant registers" and records that had formed the basis of the sex-ratio data provided by them.
