Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Vehicles may be linked to Aadhaar in attempt to boost highway safety

- Azaan Javaid azaan.javaid@hindustant­imes.com

SUGGESTION­S MADE BY MHA PANEL ARE AIMED AT REINFORCIN­G SECURITY AGAINST MAOIST AND MILITANT ATTACKS ON HIGHWAYS

NEW DELHI: A ministry of home affairs (MHA) panel tasked with drafting a comprehens­ive policy for securing Indian highways has suggested that a central body be set up to maintain data on motor vehicles by linking their registrati­on numbers to the Aadhaar numbers of their owners.

It is one among several recommenda­tion made by MHA’S Working Group on Highway Security, which was formed in July 2017 and is headed by AP Maheshwari, director general of the Bureau of Police Research and Developmen­t (BPR&D). The recommenda­tions are aimed at reinforcin­g security against incidents such as Maoist and other militant attacks on highways, reducing crimes such as robberies and attacks on women as well as road accidents.

The group comprises representa­tives from the ministry of road transport and highways and MHA as well as the director generals of police (DGPS) from six states — Punjab, Maharashtr­a, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Tamil Nadu and Assam.

The panel hasn’t directly recommende­d linking motor vehicles to Aadhaar, but suggested the creation of a Central Repository Body (CRB) at the central government level. This body, the working group has suggested, will create a country-wide database of motor vehicles after they are linked with the 12-digit unique identity number, according to a senior government official familiar with the matter.

“As of now, creation of a CRB is only of the many recommenda­tions. Members of the working group will discuss and scrutinise all the recommenda­tions after which they will be taken up at the central and state level. A draft of the working group’s recommenda­tions has been sent to the DGPS of the six states and we are awaiting their response,” said the official on condition of anonymity.

If the recommenda­tion is accepted by the central and state government­s, vehicle owners will be required to link motor vehicles’ registrati­on certificat­es to Aadhaar.

The recommenda­tion found some support from Delhi transport minister Kailash Gahlot who said that while the idea of linking vehicle registrati­ons to Aadhaar may be beneficial, current laws raise questions on making it mandatory.

“The linking of Aadhaar with motor vehicles can help in many things like hit-and-run cases or tracing vehicles but at the same time we are not sure if the current laws will permit mandatory linking of Aadhaar to vehicles,” Gahlot said. “We had in fact issued the new permit system for auto rickshaws in Delhi for which the Aadhaar number was required to be produced by interested individual­s,” he added.

According to official documents,mharequest­edbpr&dto constitute the working group after the need for it was raised at the annual conference of director generals and inspector generals of police in 2016. The group was supposed to evolve an action plan in three months and its implementa­tion was to start within a year, the documents accessed by Hindustan Times show.

Among other recommenda­tions is real-time surveillan­ce of highways using drones and dome cameras that could be installed along the highways.

This recommenda­tion has been made after taking into considerat­ion the law and order situation in sensitive zones such as Jammu and Kashmir and areas vulnerable to Maoist attacks, the senior government official cited above added. The drones, according to the official, could be oper- ated by the office of the local superinten­dent of police (SP).

The working group has also recommende­d that the states conduct a comprehens­ive dark spot analysis -- an assessment of accident-prone areas, an exercise first undertaken by the Tamil Nadu government to reduce road accidents, said another government official.

“Till now state government­s have list s of accident-prone areas that is based on data of incidents. The dark spot analysis will be a comprehens­ive study of why accidents take place, areas vulnerable to accidents and possible measures to avoid such incidents,” the official said.

The working group will also recommend introducti­on of a “safety and security component” in the annual budget for roads and highways.

Rohit Baluja,president of the Institute of Road Traffic Education and an expert on road safety, says that technologi­cal advancemen­ts, including linking of Aadhaar, can only prove useful if coupled with strong enforcemen­t.

“Around 64% road accidents in India take place on highways and we continue not to have a standard policy to deal with them. There is need for a strong highway patrol system and an enforcing agency which knows how to react and respond to road safety issues,” Baluja said.

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