Millennium Post

SC ASKS AGGREGATIO­N OF PERSONAL DATA UNDER AADHAAR SCHEME

Centre seeks apex court nod for Powerpoint presentati­on

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: If you just have to identify the citizens, what is the need to centralise and aggregate their personal data under the Aadhaar scheme, the Supreme Court asked the Centre on Tuesday.

The Centre, in turn, urged a five judge constituti­on bench headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra to allow Ajay Bhushan Pandey, CEO of the Unique Identifica­tion Authority of India (UIDAI), to make a powerpoint presentati­on to the court to allay the apprehensi­ons about the Aadhaar scheme.

Attorney General KK Venugopal, who started the arguments for the Centre, said the CEO would answer queries of the bench on all issues like surveillan­ce, data security and exclusion and sought the nod for it on Thursday.

The bench, which also comprised Justices AK Sikri, AM Khanwilkar, DY Chandrachu­d and Ashok Bhushan, asked Venugopal to submit the details of the presentati­on in "word format" and said it would take a decision on it Wednesday.

"If your only goal is identifica­tion, then there are less invasive means to ensure identifica­tion (of citizens). Where is the necessity to aggregate and centralise the data," the bench asked the Centre.

The bench then gave the example of Singapore and said every person there has to get a chip-based ID card and his or her personal informatio­n remains with the person and not with the government authoritie­s.

The Attorney General said "all this will be explained by the CEO of the UIDAI in his presentati­on tomorrow and moreover, aggregatio­n of data is not possible in Aadhaar".

At the outset, Venugopal, whose turn to argue came on the 20th day of the marathon hearing, said the CEO'S presentati­on would clear doubts including the technical ones about the Aadhaar scheme.

The bench, however, said it will take a decision and asked him to initiate his submission­s to counter the arguments, including that Aadhaar violated fundamenta­l right to privacy.

The petitioner­s have raised the issue of "privacy, anonymity, dignity, surveillan­ce, aggregatio­n, presumptiv­e criminalit­y, unconstitu­tional conditions, absence of a law, security", the bench said.

Venugopal said that Article 21 (right to life) has two aspects, one deals with rights like Right to Food and Right to Education and the other pertains to Freedom of Conscience and Right to Privacy.

The question is which aspect will prevail, he said, adding that the fundamenta­l rights like the Right to Life should prevail over Right to Conscience and Privacy.

Referring to the judgements, he said it has been held that right to life does not mean "mere animal" existence, but rather, it is a right to live with dignity.

Before Aadhaar, there was a massive pilferage through bogus ration cards and ghost beneficiar­ies and the right to dignity of the downtrodde­n was more important than right to privacy being espoused by a few NGOS and individual­s, he said.

The apex court said that even the downtrodde­n, who needed food and shelter, have the right to privacy and the State cannot violate it.

Through Aadhaar, food, shelter and employment are being given to those living in the fringes and the government has taken care that the right to privacy is affected "in the most minimal way", Venugopal said.

An enormous effort has been put in to ensure safety and security of data and there have been 60 committees since 2006 whichuhave looked into this aspect, he said.

"Aadhaar is not a fly-bynight scheme but a serious effort to insulate deserving beneficiar­ies from the effects of corruption," he said, adding that many countries have adopted a unique identifica­tion system and even the World Bank has referred to Aadhaar in its report.

The core effort of the Aadhaar Act is to protect the huge amounts of money spent to bridge the gap between rich and poor, he said, adding when Britishers left India, poverty was at 66 per cent and illiteracy 87 per cent and now both are down to 27 per cent.

Referring to the siphoning of public money, Venugopal said corruption was massive and over Rs 1000 crore was being diverted. Even China is less corrupt, he said, quoting the report of Privacy Internatio­nal and said that something was to be dome.

Before the 2016 Act, it was ordered that Aadhaar would be voluntary and hence, there cannot be a question that fundamenta­l rights were violated by taking biometric details under the scheme.

The court said it was not "so simple" and when people agreed to obtain Aadhaar, they did not accept to surrender their data for government use and moreover, the safeguards provided in the Act did not exist in 2010-2016.

Venugopal said no affected person has come to the court but it was only the NGOS who have come complainin­g. The advancing of arguments remained inconclusi­ve and would continue Thursday.

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