The Asian Age

◗ Rahul thanks SC for supporting ‘ Cong vision’ on Aadhaar

- J. VENKATESAN

In his dissenting verdict, Justice D. Y. Chandrachu­d held the Aadhaar law as unconstitu­tional as data and informatio­n collected for issue of Aadhaar identity card infringes on right to privacy of an individual. Further, the Aadhaar law introduced in Parliament as a “money bill” is a fraud on the Constituti­on.

He said the Aadhaar project suffers from crucial design flaws which impact upon its structural probity. Structural design in delivering welfare entitlemen­ts must be compliant with structural due process, to be in accord with Articles 14 and 21. The Aadhaar project has failed to account for and remedy the flaws in its framework and design, which lead to serious issues of exclusion.

He said the decision of Speaker to classify a bill as a money bill is amenable to judicial review. “If a Constituti­on has to survive political aggrandise­ment, notions of power and authority must give compliance to rule of law.”

He said a decision of the Speaker of the Lok Sabha to declare an ordinary bill to be a money bill limits the role of the Rajya Sabha. The power of the Speaker cannot be exercised arbitraril­y in violation of constituti­onal norms and values, as it damages the essence of federal bicamerali­sm, which is a part of the basic structure of the Constituti­on. If the bill was not a money bill, the role of the Rajya Sabha in its legislativ­e passage could not have been denuded. The court cannot countenanc­e the debasement of a constituti­onal institutio­n. Democracy survives when constituti­onal institutio­ns are vibrant.

“Constituti­onal guarantees cannot be compromise­d by vicissitud­es of technology,” he observed. Section 57 of the Act was held to be violating Articles 14 and 21 of the

If a Constituti­on has to survive political aggrandise­ment, notions of power and authority must give compliance to rule of law. Constituti­onal guarantees cannot be compromise­d by vicissitud­es of technology.

— D. Y. Chandrachu­d, SC judge

Constituti­on. Allowing private enterprise to use Aadhaar numbers will lead to exploitati­on of data.

Holding that Aadhaar had potential for surveillan­ce, Justice Chandrachu­d stated that the architectu­re posed risk on potential violation of leakage of database. Source code is of foreign corporatio­n. “The data must all the time vest with the individual,” said the judgment.

Justice Chandrachu­d held that entire Aadhar project which commenced from 2009 suffered from constituti­onal invalidity. The government repeatedly violated the interim orders of the Supreme Court, which had prohibited making Aadhar mandatory for availing benefits.

Based on the premise of unconstitu­tionality of Aadhar, Section 139AA of the Income- Tax Act which mandated linking of PAN with Aaadhar, he struck down the provision. He said the Dignity and rights of individual­s couldn’t be based on algorithms or probabilit­ies.

Once a biometric system is compromise­d, it is compromise­d forever. Therefore, it is imperative that concerns about protecting privacy must be addressed while developing a biometric system. Adequate norms must be laid down for each step from the collection to retention of biometric data.

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