Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Unique numbers to track kids’ developmen­t

- Neelam Pandey

NEWDELHI: The government plans to give children born in India unique numbers which will be used to track the holistic developmen­t of children in education, health and jobs, a senior official said, detailing a move that analysts see as both well-meaning and controvers­ial, given the privacy and security concerns that have surfaced around Aadhaar, the unique biometric enabled ID.

According to the official who asked not to be identified, the project will involve several ministries including human resources developmen­t (HRD), health, women and child developmen­t, minority affairs, tribal affairs, social justice and skill developmen­t. This person explained that each child will just have a unique number, with no biometric data capture involved (as it is in Aadhaar), and that issues related to privacy and security will, as a result, not arise.

“We are planning to set up a database that will track the child from birth till the child gets employment. So this database will capture health related issues of the child, then the same data can be used by the women and child developmen­t ministry; the same unique number will be connected with school related data,” said a senior HRD ministry official on condition of anonymity, explaining how the number will work.

Terming it as a mere tracker and different from Aadhaar, the HRD ministry official added the idea has been received positively by all ministries concerned.

“On the front end we will not use Aadhaar. There is a unique number that gets created at the birth of a child by the health department,” the HRD ministry official said.

That unique number, he added, will be used throughout, and as and when the child gets an Aadhaar number, it will be linked.

There will not be any biometric biometric authentica­tion as is the case with Aadhar, this person added. The idea emerged during discussion in the informal group of secretarie­s in the social sector department. The aim, the HRD ministry official explained, is to track “the overall developmen­t of the child.”

“Convergenc­e of data is a doubled-edged sword. There is definitely benefit in having some convergenc­e around medical data. It is useful to try to find a pattern in the data and identify the co-relations that can potentiall­y lead to better medical outcomes. But on the other hand this could also lead to discrimina­tion and other forms of reputation­al harms,” said Rahul Matthan, partner at law firm Trilegal.

He added that it was important that the government tread carefully, especially because there are privacy issues and children are involved. “Simply masking the Aadhaar details may not be enough. Given the sensitive nature of medical data the government should be especially careful particular­ly since we don’t have privacy law in the country right now. “Across the world children’s data is given the highest level of protection since they don’t have the ability to consent even though they will be the ones who will face the consequenc­es later in life.”

A technical group is currently working out the details on understand­ing the existing data structure that exists in these ministries and how the data can be converged so that all ministries will be able to use the data from a single database.

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