Millennium Post

Five-judge Constituti­on bench to hear Aadhaar pleas from today

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: A five-judge Constituti­on bench of the Supreme Court would commence Tuesday the hearing on a batch of petitions challengin­g the validity of the Aadhaar scheme and the aspect of right to privacy attached to it.

The Constituti­on bench would comprise Chief Justice J S Khehar and Justices J Chelameswa­r, S A Bobde, D Y Chandrachu­d and S Abdul Nazeer.

The apex court had agreed to set up a bench on July 12 to deal with the Aadhaarrel­ated matters after Attorney General K K Venugopal and senior advocate Shyam Divan, appearing for petitioner­s who have challenged the government’s move to make Aadhaar mandatory for various public welfare schemes, had jointly mentioned the matters.

The attorney general and Divan had mentioned the matter before the CJI as a threejudge bench had on July seven said that all issues arising out of Aadhaar should finally be decided by a larger bench and the CJI would take a call on the need for setting up a Constituti­on bench.

A three-judge bench had in 2015 referred to a Constituti­on bench the batch of petitions challengin­g the Centre’s Aadhaar card scheme to decide whether right to privacy was a fundamenta­l right.

The petitioner­s had claimed that collection and sharing of biometric informatio­n, as required under the scheme, was a breach of the “fundamenta­l” right to privacy.

Allowing the Centre’s plea, the court had framed various questions, including as to whether right to privacy is a fundamenta­l right, to be decided by a Constituti­on bench. “If yes, then what would be contours of the right to privacy,” the bench had said while referring the matter to the then CJI for setting up the larger bench.

At an earlier hearing, then AG Mukul Rohatgi, while backing the Aadhaar card scheme, had contended that right to privacy was not a fundamenta­l right.

“No judgment explicitly cites right to privacy as a fundamenta­l right. It is not there under the letters of Article 21 either. If this court feels that there must be clarity on this subject, only a Constituti­on Bench can decide,” the AG had said. He had cited two judgments, pronounced by six and eight- judge benches, which had held that right to privacy is not a fundamenta­l right.

“Whether right to privacy is a fundamenta­l right guaranteed under Part III of the Constituti­on of India, in the light of express ratio to the contrary by an eight-judge bench in M P Sharma case and also by a six-judge bench of this court in Kharak Singh’s case has to be decided,” Rohtagi had said.

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