Millennium Post

EXECUTIVE VIOLATING SC ORDERS AT WILL

Mandatory Aadhaar becoming nuisance for everyday man

- NANTOO BANERJEE (The views expressed are strictly personal.)

The Supreme Court has time and again reminded the government that the use of Aadhaar card cannot be made mandatory. But, to the surprise and chagrin of state government­s and the common man, especially the poor and the needy, the Bjp-led Union government seems to be sparing no opportunit­y to link more and more centrally sponsored schemes with Aadhaar to the utter disregard of the apex court orders. The latest notificati­on making Aadhaar mandatory for small students up to VIII standard, covered under the mid-day meal programme, by the Union Ministry of Human Resource Developmen­t (MHRD) has come under fire from Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee of West Bengal and Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan.

In Delhi, both Trinamool Congress and Congress MPS have sent notices to the Rajya Sabha chairman demanding a debate on the issue. Mamata Banerjee called the Centre’s decision “inhuman”. Vijayan termed it as “absurd.” Last week, following Mamata Banerjee’s nationwide call to protest against making Aadhaar mandatory for mid-day meals, the Centre issued a statement saying “in case of Mid-day Meal scheme and the Integrated Child Developmen­t Scheme, the schools and Anganwadis have been asked to collect the Aadhaar number of the children beneficiar­ies and in case a child does not have Aadhaar, the school or ICDS functionar­y will be required to provide enrollment facilities to a child and till Aadhaar number is assigned, the benefits will continue”. Thus, the Centre did not entirely withdraw its earlier notificati­on. It merely allowed the scheme to continue until other children are assigned an Aadhaar number.

Aadhaar linkage has been made mandatory to avail of benefits under some three dozen central schemes, including Sarv Shiksha Abhiyan. Aadhaar will soon be made mandatory for all 84 schemes covered so far under direct subsidy benefit transfer programme. From subsidised kerosene oil for the poor to crop insurance by farmers and concession­al rail fares for senior citizens, all are being mandatoril­y brought under Aadhaar. Worse still, the government is insisting that those entitled to concession­s pay at full rates for the subsidised products and services before getting the subsidised amount reimbursed in their Aadhaar-linked bank accounts.

Apparently, this is to let such poor consumers know exactly how much financial help they are receiving from the centre. Such an act appears to be a height of arrogance on the part of the Centre, treating the recipients of subsidies as a bunch of beggars. This also totally disregards a common sense explanatio­n that the subsidies are given to the needy and weaker sections as a state policy because these people can’t financiall­y afford to procure those essential products or facilities at their listed market rates. The government does not pay for subsidies and concession­s from its pocket. Taxpayers, direct and indirect, pay for it. They include almost every citizen, including the poor and incapacita­ted, since nearly all consumers come under the indirect tax net. The payment of subsidies on account of food under the public distributi­on system, fertiliser­s and seeds, jobs for the unemployed in rural areas for a minimum number of days, kerosene and limited number of household cooking gas cylinders, financial inclusion under Jan Dhan Yojana etc. does not absolve the democratic government of its duty to ensure a minimum living standard for the needy and poor, whose votes elevate political ‘netas’ to power. If the nation’s economical­ly deprived have been the ultimate source of power for all political parties, they deserve a better treatment from their government­s.

Only last year, a Constituti­on Bench led by former Chief Justice H L Dattu, clarified that linking of Aadhaar for providing such services as MGNREGA, Jan Dhan Yojana, pension and provident fund schemes may be allowed by the government, but they will only be on a voluntary basis, and no person shall be deprived of any benefit for want of Aadhaar. The Supreme Court had earlier restricted its use to the public distributi­on system and LPG subsidy.

The apex court also reminded the Central government that Aadhaar cannot be made mandatory for any services. The court ordered the government to remove a condition making it compulsory for the students to give their Aadhaar numbers for various scholarshi­p schemes. A bench led by Justice V Gopala Gowda recalled an order of the top court in October 2015 whereby it was clarified that “the Aadhaar Card Scheme is purely voluntary and it cannot be made mandatory till the matter is finally decided by this Court one way or the other”. But, a letter sent by the Central government to chief secretarie­s and administra­tors of all states and union territorie­s declared that only online applicatio­n under the National Scholarshi­p Scheme would be accepted and “it may be noted that submission of Aadhaar is mandatory.”

Appearing for All Bengal Minority Students Council, senior lawyer Gopal Jain had said that this communicat­ion was in contempt of the interim order passed by a Constituti­on Bench, which repeatedly said that Aadhaar could not be made mandatory and nobody could be denied access to any service for want of it. The bench accepted his submission and stayed the operation and implementa­tion of Centre’s communicat­ion for Pre-matric Scholarshi­p Scheme, Post-matric Scholarshi­p Scheme and Merit-cumMeans Scholarshi­p Scheme to the extent they made submission of Aadhaar mandatory. “We direct the Ministry of Electronic­s and Informatio­n Technology, Government of India to remove Aadhaar number as a mandatory condition for students’ registrati­on form at the National Scholarshi­p Portal…” the court said in its order. The court also sought an explanatio­n from the Centre for including such a condition despite the five-judge bench’s restraint against making Aadhaar compulsory.

The government’s seemingly arrogant and unreasonab­le diktats on making Aadhaar mandatory for all Centrally-aided and sponsored schemes, without any legal sanction, provision, or approval, and challengin­g the Supreme Court and even its most powerful Constituti­on Bench orders are being interprete­d as a contempt of court by many. Our Constituti­onal system does not allow the executive to overrule Parliament and the judiciary which are independen­t of each other. The government is acutely aware of that. One only expects that better sense will prevail.

The government’s seemingly arrogant and unreasonab­le diktats on making Aadhaar mandatory for all Centrally-aided and sponsored schemes, without any legal sanction, provision, or approval, and challengin­g the Supreme Court and even its most powerful Constituti­on Bench orders are being interprete­d as a contempt of court

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