Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Verdict on Aadhaar petitions today

- Ashok Bagriya letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

NEW DELHI: A five-judge bench of the Supreme Court will decide on Wednesday the constituti­onality of Aadhaar, the controvers­ial biometric identity card project that the government claims plugged leaks in welfare schemes but which critics dub as intrusive and violating privacy.

The Constituti­on Bench, comprising CJI Dipak Misra and justices AK Sikri, AM Khanwilkar, DY Chandrachu­d and Ashok Bhushan, reserved its verdict on May 10 after hearing the petitions for over 38 days starting January 17 this year. More than 30 petitions have challenged the Aadhaar act and government orders that made it compulsory for linking of bank accounts, mobile phone numbers, permanent account numbers and filing of income taxes to the unique identifica­tion number.

The court will also decide whether the government was right in passing the Aadhaar (Targeted Delivery of Financial & Other Subsidies, Benefits & Services) Bill in March, 2016, as a money bill, which meant that only the Lok Sabha (where the government has a comfortabl­e majority) had voting rights, without the assent of the Rajya Sabha (where the government is in minority). The petitioner­s argued the Aadhaar act should not have been passed as a money bill and even if the act is upheld,

the unique ID cannot be used for purposes other than distributi­on of subsidies.

The petitioner­s argued that Aadhaar encroached on the right to privacy of citizens, which the court confirmed as a fundamenta­l right in a nine-judge bench verdict in August 2017. Senior advocate Shyam Diwan, appearing for petitioner Kalyani Menon Sen, termed Aadhaar “an electronic leash” and argued the government could completely destroy an individual by “switching off” the 12-digit number.

Attorney general KK Venugopal made the case that the Aadhaar law complied with the tests laid down in the right to privacy

judgment.

It’s fair, just and a reasonable law with adequate safeguards, is in pursuance of a larger public interest, including preventing dissipatio­n of social welfare benefits, and for prevention of black money and money laundering, he explained.

He stressed the need to balance two competing rights: the right to live a life of dignity, which includes the right to food, employment and medical care and the right to privacy.

Unique Identifica­tion Authority of India (UIDAI) chief executive officer (CEO) Ajay Bhushan Pandey made a PowerPoint presentati­on to the bench, claiming

data collected under Aadhaar was encrypted and even “the faster computer on earth will take more than the age of the universe” to break the encryption key.

The government also argued that the demographi­c informatio­n required under Aadhaar was already being taken under section 139A of the Income Tax Act for obtaining PAN along with the left hand thumb impression of individual­s who cannot sign. Aadhaar will ensure one person has only one PAN and by interconne­cting the PAN-Aadhaar database, make tax evasion, black money and setting up of shell companies difficult.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India