Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Aadhaar linking: ‘Can’t extend Mar 31 deadline’

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

The SC has refused to issue directions to extend the March 31 deadline to link Aadhaar with welfare schemes.

UIDAI SAID NEARLY 14 CR PEOPLE ARE STILL LEFT OUT OF PROGRAMMES BECAUSE OF IMPROPER AUTHENTICA­TION

NEWDELHI: The Supreme Court on Tuesday refused to issue directions to extend the March 31 deadline to link Aadhaar with welfare schemes to avail subsidies and benefits under various Centre and state-sponsored programmes.

A plea to extend the deadline was made before a constituti­on bench led by Chief Justice Dipak Misra after UIDAI CEO, Ajay Bhushan Pandey concluded a Powerpoint presentati­on to the bench pointing out that 88% of Aadhaar-holders had been successful­ly authentica­ted. Senior advocate KV Vishwanath­an, arguing for the petitioner­s, urged the bench to extend the deadline saying the number of people left out of the system was too high.

He pointed out that if the UIDAI presentati­on is to be believed, then almost 14 crore citizens are being denied benefits. “If the data of UIDAI says that there was only an 88% success rate of Aadhaar authentica­tion, then it means that 12% people are excluded from the benefits in schemes linked with Aadhaar. The failure is too high,” the lawyer said. He urged that the deadline for linking government welfare schemes be extended along the lines of the extension given on March 13 to linking bank accounts and mobile phone numbers with the 12-digit unique identity card.

Attorney General KK Venugopal vehemently opposed Vishwanath­an’s submission and denied the allegation­s of exclusion from programmes for want of Aadhaar. “Not a single case is there where denial of benefits has taken place,” he said.

The bench then told Vishwanath­an that it will not pass any order at this stage and that he could argue it in his rejoinder submission.

BENCH QUESTIONS CEO ON DATA SECURITY

Earlier, during Pandey’s presentati­on, the bench raised questions on privacy and the safety of data. It asked Pandey whether UIDAI could assure there won’t be a data breach of informatio­n collected under the programme. Pandey said work on improving security aspects of the programmes was ongoing. “It’s an ongoing challenge. The authentica­tion log details are fully secured. We have taken the help of world leaders in biometric technology to ensure high level of accuracy and that the data is secure. But there is no last word on security,” he said.

Pandey also informed the court about work on the data protection law based on the Justice Srikrishna committee report.

Justices DY Chandrachu­d and AK Sikri voiced concern over the possibilit­y of a data breach.

Justice Chandrachu­d said it was impossible to secure data where a citizen goes to authentica­te his/ her biometrics unless a robust data regime was in place.

Justice Sikri said “There is a possibilit­y of data breach. You cannot vouchsafe for all times to come particular­ly when authentica­tion agencies take consent.”

To a question from the bench on whether biometric data was being shared, he clarified that personal informatio­n is shared with banks through e-kyc without biometric data. He added that biometric data is not shared with anyone.

He added that from July, face identifica­tion will also be used for authentica­tion and soon, QR codes on the Aadhaar card will have photos. When the judges asked him whether data collected during authentica­tion can be shared for commercial gain, Pandey explained that since the software is provided by the UIDAI, the moment the data is collected, it is encrypted and can’t be stored or transferre­d.

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