Deccan Chronicle

First protect Aadhaar data

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The government has mandated the linking of PAN with Aadhaar by August 31. Its determinat­ion to go ahead despite the Supreme Court expressing so many reservatio­ns about the government impinging on citizens’ right to privacy is disturbing. It may be reasonable to insist Aadhaar be the biometric identifyin­g marker to get government subsidies and welfare benefits, but what the government action on various issues on Aadhaar suggests is that it wants to railroad its way before a three-member bench can pass orders on how Aadhaar should operate. Such stubbornne­ss in the face of a landmark verdict on privacy clearly points to an attempt to make all people compliant with the unique identifica­tion system, without considerin­g whether such actions may breach the recommenda­tions laid down by the nine-judge Constituti­on Bench.

The logic behind the government’s move — which might even mandate a person can’t die without taking an Aadhaar number — to link PAN is understand­able as the system issuing those cards was so sham that the Centre itself invalidate­d several lakh bogus PAN cards. The Establishm­ent’s anxiety to root out all problems created by its own inefficien­cies may push it in this direction. The least it can do is to go easy on all “compulsory” registrati­ons until more clarity is shed by the Supreme Court. UIDAI’s primary concern should be to safeguard its data more than overload the system with tasks like taking compliance near 100 per cent quickly. Will the government be able to assure 1.3 crore people that their privacy won’t be breached by intrusive collection of identity data?

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