Business Standard

Govt hints at changes to Aadhaar Act

- ARCHIS MOHAN & PRESS TRUST OF INDIA

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said his understand­ing of the verdict was that the Supreme Court had barred the usage of Aadhaar by private entities

such as mobile phone firms in the absence of a legislativ­e backing for that. He said the prohibited

areas were not perpetuall­y prohibited but could be procedural­ly prohibited. ARCHIS MOHAN writes

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said his understand­ing of the verdict was that the Supreme Court had barred the usage of Aadhaar by private entities such as mobile phone firms in the absence of a legislativ­e backing for that. He said the prohibited areas, such linking with mobile phone, were not perpetuall­y prohibited but could be procedural­ly prohibited — indicating the government could bring in a law to this effect.

“Section 57 (of the Aadhaar Act that has been struck down by the Supreme Court) says there can be special enabling power to allow other entities or body corporate (to use Aadhaar). That is not permissibl­e unless it is backed by law. That seems to be the spirit of the judgment,” he said.

Asked about the requiremen­t

of Aadhaar-linking with bank accounts and mobile phones now, Jaitley said: “Let us first read the judgment. There are two-three prohibited areas. Are they because they are totally prohibited or are they because they need legal backing? So my answer in general... on these private entities, (is) it needs to be backed by law. That’s my understand­ing. I still have a detailed reading of the judgment to do.”

“The prohibited areas do not assume are perpetuall­y prohibited they could be procedural­ly prohibited or they could be prohibited as such,” he said.

Law and Informatio­n Technology Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad said the court had held that the purpose of issuing Aadhaar to all Indian citizens was legitimate and no surveillan­ce was possible.

“The whole concept of a unique identity number that has been accepted after judicial review is an extremely welcome decision,” Jaitley said, adding the court had also upheld that the Aadhaar legislatio­n was a money Bill.

While the five-judge Bench acknowledg­ed the constituti­onal validity of the Bill, Justice D Y Chandrachu­d issued a strongly worded dissent note.

The minister showered compliment­s on Aadhaar’s architect Nandan Nilekani and the programme’s current head Ajay Bhushan Pandey.

He said 1.22 billion people now have the unique identifica­tion cards, used to disperse government subsidy and welfare measures. “There are no fake or duplicate or non-existent beneficiar­ies (of government schemes). We are already saving ~900 billion every year,” he said.

“This judgment is a judgment of empowering democracy, good governance, service delivery, and also empowering the ordinary Indian,” Prasad said.

THERE ARE NOW 1.22 BN PEOPLE WHO HAVE AADHAAR… BY IDENTIFYIN­G BENEFICIAR­IES OF GOVT SCHEMES, WE’RE SAVING ~900 BN EVERY YEAR” ARUN JAITLEY Finance minister

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