Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Shah proposes common card for data of citizens

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: India’s next decadal headcount in 2021 will be carried out on a mobile applicatio­n, Union home minister Amit Shah said on Monday, as he floated the idea of a unique multi-purpose identity card for citizens that could double up as a voter identity document, permanent account number or even passport.

Speaking at a ceremony in New Delhi, the minister also said that updating the national population register (NPR), which will happen simultaneo­usly with the census, will be completely digital and help in fighting crime, plugging subsidy leakages and promoting gender equality.

“Why can’t we have just one card for all utilities like Aadhaar, passport, bank account, driving licence, voter card? There should be a system that all data should be put together in a single card,” Shah said after laying the foundation stone of a new building of the Registrar General of India in the national capital.

The minister clarified that the government had no scheme at present to introduce a multipurpo­se identity card. “But this is a possibilit­y,” he added.

The census mobile app will comprise about 60 questions, from the amenities available in a household, source of drinking water and power, to religion, occupation, and languages spoken by the family.

The deadline for the census, the 16th such exercise since 1872, is March 1, 2021.

“It will be a transforma­tion from paper census to a digital census,” Shah said.

Only a handful of countries have done away with paper records for the census. India, Vietnam and Swaziland are first to take this leap. In the latter countries, census officials had trained graduate students for about a year to double up as enumerator­s. India will be using an estimated 2.7 million enumerator­s for the census, which is expected to cost ~12,000 crore and will be carried out in 16 languages.

Shah said the 2021 census data will help in planning, especially for developmen­t initiative­s and welfare schemes, and it will be a ‘Jan Bhagidari’ (people’s participat­ion) exercise.

“The utilisatio­n of census data is multidimen­sional and will be a significan­t contributi­on to the nation’s progress,” Shah said. He added that the data will help in demarcatin­g boundaries of municipal wards, assemblies and Lok Sabha constituen­cies.

Recording data directly into a mobile phone is likely to speed up the process of data collection and analysis. “The results will be available almost immediatel­y,” registrar general of India Vivek Joshi said. “In contrast, 2011 census — where data was collected on paper — data took almost seven years to publish,” Joshi added.

The newly developed app will be fed into the phone of government school teachers who will double up as census enumerator­s, said senior government officials who did not want to be named. If it becomes a reality, the multipurpo­se card will be the first document to be issued under the 1955 Citizenshi­p Act, which empowers the Centre to compulsori­ly register every citizen and issue multi-purpose national identity cards.

To activate this plan, the government would first update the NPR and then ask people in this register to establish their citizenshi­p.

The idea of a multipurpo­se card was first proposed by then deputy prime minister Lal Krishna Advani in 1999 but was subsequent­ly shelved as government­s focused on expanding Aadhaar, the unique 12-digit biometric identity project. Countries such as Singapore already use a multi-purpose identity card. The census is conducted in two stages. In the first, to be carried out next year, enumerator­s will have to go house-to-house to record the amenities in each household. This is called the household schedule. The headcount will be carried out about six months later, in early 2021.

While the census and the NPR — a register of residents of India — will have some common data points like name, date of birth, father’s name, the NPR also asks for a completely different set of data.

For instance, it will ask people to also give their Aadhaar, passport, mobile and income tax PAN number and number of Electors Photo Identity card.

There are two crucial difference­s between the census and NPR processes. First, the census doesn’t ask for individual identity details, and at the end of the day, is a macro exercise. The NPR, on the other hand, is designed to collect identity details of every individual.

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Amit Shah

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