Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Moving towards an equitable society

The apex court has supported the inclusive vision of the Aadhaar project first defined in 2009

- NANDAN NILEKANI

One of the longest hearings in the history of the Supreme Court of India came to an end on Wednesday. The verdict is out, and it is clear: the Supreme Court has supported the inclusive vision of the Aadhaar project first defined in 2009, and upheld its validity. Aadhaar has undergone tremendous scrutiny over the last nine years, as it should in a democratic society like ours. The result is a stronger, more people-centric Aadhaar.

Over the last few years, the fundamenta­l principles of the Aadhaar project have themselves come into question. There has been speculatio­n and assertion of exclusion and the effort to create a “cradle to grave” surveillan­ce-state. What I’m most happy about is that the court took a holistic view and recognised the core principles that form the bedrock on which Aadhaar was conceptual­ised.

First, the majority judgment has recognised that while many identity documents exist, Aadhaar is distinct because of its uniqueness. In a light-hearted opening remark, Justice Sikri said that being unique is being better than being best: because when you are best, you are number one, but when you are unique, you are the only one. This validates that even though many IDS existed, their existence did not undermine the need for Aadhaar.

Second, all five judges, including the one who gave a dissenting judgment, Justice DY Chandrachu­d, agree that the state’s interest in the creation of Aadhaar is legitimate. The targeted delivery of welfare, benefits and subsidies from the consolidat­ed fund of India to their intended beneficiar­ies is an important state aim, and a unique identifier like Aadhaar is a proportion­ate response to that need.

Third, the majority judgment recognised that Aadhaar “qualifies as a document of empowermen­t”. It gives the ability to the marginalis­ed and underserve­d in our country to claim their rightful benefits and entitlemen­ts. There have been some stories recently that Aadhaar authentica­tion itself has become a means of exclusion. The Supreme Court recognised that while it is unfortunat­e that any exclusion exists, the magnitude of exclusion is close to 0.2%. It is better to work towards reducing the 0.2% to 0 than to jeopardise the 99.8%, many of whom are among the most marginalis­ed.

Fourth, the Supreme Court summarily rejected that Aadhaar is used for surveillan­ce. It looked at the facts to realise that Aadhaar truly believes in the idea of minimal data collection. The demographi­c and biometric data collected are minimal, the authentica­tion logs do not carry purpose of authentica­tion and UIDAI regulation­s have upheld the principles of minimal data collection and privacy by design. In such a scenario, the claim that UIDAI enables profiling or a surveillan­ce state, was rejected by the court. The Court has however built in a safeguard for the national security exception and strengthen­ed the individual with the direction to amend S 33(2) of the UIDAI Act.

Fifth, once again the Supreme Court has said that India requires a comprehens­ive data protection and empowermen­t regime. While Aadhaar attracted a disproport­ionate amount of noise in the media, the privacy issues in this country do not start and end with Aadhaar. I have been requesting the government for such a law since 2010. The recently released Justice Srikrishna Committee report is an attempt to further this, and I am glad the Supreme Court has also rec- ognised the importance of a law and a regulator.

The issues addressed in the judgment are fundamenta­l to the Indian polity — privacy, protection against overreach by the state and private parties and most importantl­y, identity and one’s right to access basic services. The message from the court is about “balance”, “purpose”, “proportion­ality” and “regulation”.

The bench has commented on distinct issues in the judgment — at the centre of each of these is the individual for whose sake Aadhaar was conceptual­ised. Every amendment directed namely, S. 33(2), S.47 and S.57 is anchored on the central idea of strengthen­ing the individual’s place vis-a-vis institutio­ns. It also reinforces the idea of the type of relationsh­ip that institutio­ns of power must have with the people — not with a “suspicion” or “exclusion” mindset but with an “inclusion” mindset. The judgment urges us to leverage the best of home-grown technology to help the underserve­d sections of Indian society leapfrog to a more equitable society and achieve their full human potential.

The judgment is 1,500 pages long and came after 38 days of hearing. There are many nuances in the judgment that we will understand and unpack over the next few days. For now, we must move ahead by building on this foundation and deliver on our promise to the marginalis­ed.

As we approach the 149th birth anniversar­y of Mahatma Gandhi, it would be fitting to remember his message: “Recall the face of the poorest and weakest man you have seen, and ask yourself if this step you contemplat­e is going to be any use to him”. The Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld the vision of our founding father and the promise of our Constituti­on.

 ?? Illustrati­on: MOHIT SUNEJA ??
Illustrati­on: MOHIT SUNEJA
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