Deccan Chronicle

Govt bid to extend data dragnet clipped, partly

- Parsa Venkateshw­ar Rao Jr

It is important to remember that a nine-judge Constituti­on Bench of the Supreme Court led by then Chief Justice J.S. Khehar had on August 24, 2017 had declared that privacy is a fundamenta­l right under Article 21 in what can be called the first Aadhaar case. The petitioner in this case was former Karnataka judge K.N. Puttaswamy, the first chairperso­n of the National Commission for the Protection of Child Rights, Magsaysay award winner Shanta Sinha and some others. It should also to be remembered that the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi had argued that privacy was not an inviolable fundamenta­l right.

In its second Aadhaar judgment by 4-1, led by Chief Justice Dipak Misra, the court held in a majority view that the right to privacy had to be balanced with the right to food, which is part of Article 21’s right to life with dignity, and as Aadhaar is a means to provide targeted subsidy, benefit and service to the needy, it does not to that extent violate the right to privacy. They have applied the principle to proportion­ality to assess the validity of Aadhaar.

And it is on the same principle of proportion­ality that the court had rejected the requiremen­t of Aadhaar to open, or to continue to operate, a bank account as a way of checking money-laundering, or for a mobile phone connection. It, however, agreed to allow connecting Aadhaar to the PAN card to prevent a person getting more than one PAN card. The majority view had also accepted that the Aadhaar Act passes the test of a money bill, which did not require the approval of the Rajya Sabha, but retained the court’s right to judicial scrutiny of the Lok Sabha Speaker’s decision to declare a bill as a money bill, and it reiterated that the Rajya Sabha is a part of the basic structure of the Constituti­on. The court has declared that private corporatio­ns and individual­s cannot access Aadhaar data. It also asserted that Aadhaar is not mandatory. It remains a voluntary act of the citizen.

The lone dissenting judge, Justice D.Y. Chandrachu­d, held the Aadhaar Act as unconstitu­tional because it was treated as a money bill because he held that it does not qualify to be a money bill. And therefore, the provisions under the act become null and void. He saw through the political game played by the Narendra Modi government to overcome its lack of majority in the Upper House by making the Aadhaar Act a money bill which did not need the Rajya Sabha’s approval. By implicatio­n, Justice Chandrachu­d did not reject the provisions of the Aadhaar Act per se, but demanded that it be passed as a separate law which should be passed by both Houses of Parliament. This is an issue that casts a long shadow on the constituti­onal morality of this government, though it does not affect it because it is part of a minority judgment.

The claims of finance minister Arun Jaitley and law and justice and informatio­n technology minister Ravi Shankar Prasad on the September 26 verdict validating the Aadhaar Act should be taken with a pinch of salt. The government’s wings have been clipped in more ways than one. It cannot run amok with Aadhaar and spread the dragnet of collecting informatio­n about citizens. Ideologica­lly, all political parties in power want to maximise state control, and Aadhaar has become a handy instrument in the process.

But the basic confusion as to what Aadhaar should be remains unresolved even after the two major verdicts of the Supreme Court. It is this: If Aadhaar is meant as a way of targeting subsidies, benefits and services to the poor, then why is the whole population being covered by Aadhaar? It cannot be the case that the whole population of 1.3 billion is a beneficiar­y of subsidies, benefits and services of the State. The subsidies, benefits and services meant for the poor are limited in scope and they do not overlap with the universal rights that a citizen can rightfully demand from the State. Aadhaar, as conceived by UPA-1 in 2006, was aimed at identifyin­g people below the poverty line. It was quietly transforme­d into an identity marker. The court in its September 26 judgment did not object to Aadhaar being used for purposes other than getting subsidies, benefits and services for the poor. It has, however, demarcated lines, making the extension of Aadhaar for PAN cards legal, but its mandatory extension to the opening of bank accounts as a way checking black money as illegal.

It seems that Prime Minister Narendra Modi embraced Aadhaar with the zeal of a neophyte — he was opposed to it when he was Gujarat chief minister — because he saw the scope of spreading the tentacles of the State in the service of the national interest. The court in its majority judgment has made it clear that the government cannot extend the uses of Aadhaar indiscrimi­nately. The Prime Minister’s initial motto of maximum governance, minimum government has been turned on its head and it has now become the famous Orwellian doublespea­k, where the government, and not governance, is everywhere.

The Supreme Court judgments should not be viewed as a closure of the national debate over Aadhaar. The government and those who support Aadhaar as a technologi­cal blessing have to clarify whether Aadhaar is the Indian equivalent of America’s social security number, or is it limited to identifyin­g the beneficiar­ies of government subsidies, that is the poor. Using Aadhaar as the equivalent of a social security number appears rational, but it needs to be stated clearly. And then too, Aadhaar cannot be used as a weapon of state surveillan­ce. The author is a Delhibased commentato­r and analyst

It is on the principle of proportion­ality that the court had rejected the requiremen­t of Aadhaar to open or operate a bank account or for a mobile phone connection The Prime Minister’s initial motto of maximum governance, minimum government has been turned on its head and it has now become the famous Orwellian doublespea­k

When the police personnel are illequippe­d, one cannot blame them for being a witness rather than the one who prevents crimes. A life would have been saved if policemen present on the scene were equipped with pistols. Mohd. Rasheed

Vikarabad It is shocking to read about the gruesome murder on a highway in the city. While the law will take its course and the culprits will be punished, we must note that it all started from a love affair. The woman who is responsibl­e for this mayhem will be let off the hook. It may sound old fashioned to blame the woman but it is the truth that women have a bigger responsibi­lity in upholding the value system of a society. Jyotsna Prasad Hyderabad

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