Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Aadhaar linkage deadline put off until SC verdict

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The exemption was made after senior advocate Arvind Datar complained that the government had amended passport rules in breach of the court directive not to make Aadhaar mandatory. He showed the court his colleague Vrinda Grover’s passport, which was cancelled because she refused to part with her Aadhaar details.

“It is also directed that the same shall also control and govern the Passports (1st Amendment) Rules, 2018,” the court ordered, saying its directive shall also apply to state government­s.

In December last year, the top court extended until March 31, the December 31, 2017 deadline for mandatoril­y linking various services with their Aadhaar number, which has become the bedrock of government welfare programmes, the tax administra­tion network and online financial transactio­ns.

The bench is currently hearing petitioner­s who have questioned the validity of Aadhaar and subsequent rules making the number mandatory for such services. The government will respond after the petitioner­s present their case.

A final judgment is unlikely before the end of this month.

Attorney General KK Venugopal, who appears for UIDAI, left it to the court to extend the interim order. However, he urged the bench not to disturb the arrangemen­t under section 7 of the law.

On March 7, the bench indicated the possibilit­y of extending the deadline. It had expressed displeasur­e over banks, mobile phone companies and financial institutio­ns continuing to coerce people to link their Aadhaar number for uninterrup­ted services. A delay in extending the deadline would have implicatio­ns on financial institutio­ns, banks and stock exchanges.

The order to postpone the linkage indefinite­ly brings relief to consumers bombarded by telemarket­ing messages, said Vipin Nair, advocate for petitioner Kalyani Sen Menon. “The order came from the bench because they felt the uncertaint­y is causing havoc. The messages should stop now. If they don’t then we will seek a specific order.”

Venugopal had said the Centre was not averse to extending the deadline, but there was no immediate requiremen­t for an extension and advised the bench to see how the case progresses.

SC on March 7 stopped the Central Bureau of Secondary Education (CBSE) from making Aadhaar compulsory for students writing the National Eligibilit­y and Entrance Test for admission to medical and dental colleges.

Meanwhile, senior advocate P Chidambara­m concluded his arguments in the case. He appeared for Congress leader Jairam Ramesh whose petition talks about the “illegality” committed in passing the Aadhaar law as a money bill.

Ramesh has claimed that the Aadhaar (Targeted Delivery of Financial and Other Subsidies, Benefits and Services) Bill, 2016 was certified as a money bill to avoid its scrutiny by the Rajya Sabha, which does not have any say on such legislatio­n.

Chidambara­m cited several SC judgements to press his point that judicial interventi­on is permitted in cases where an unconstitu­tional act is committed by Parliament. Passing the law as a money bill strikes at the root of federalism and to ignore the violation of a constituti­onal mandate will be an inexcusabl­e error, he argued.

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