The Free Press Journal

Aadhaar hearing: What is wrong with ‘one-nation, one-identity’, questions SC

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The Supreme Court on Wednesday was told that vulnerabil­ity of citizens’ demographi­c and biometric data collected under Aadhaar to leaks is itself the violation of their right to privacy.

“Vulnerabil­ity (of personal data collected under Aadhaar to leaks) is violation of rights,” senior counsel Kapil Sibal told the five judge constituti­on bench headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra, reports IANS.

Appearing for West Bengal government, Sibal said that the functionin­g of the digital world was vulnerable to the sabotage and pointed out no other country in the world has such a centralise­d demographi­c and biometric data of its citizens.

Telling the court that there was “no system of the world that can’t be hacked”, he said if one goes to railway booking counter and feeds Aadhaar number, then it would reveal all journeys they had under- taken by trains in the past.

Pointing out that same was the case with air journeys, Sibal asked: “Why should the state know where I am going and what I am doing?”

At this, Justice A.K. Sikri recounted how he once took his wife for a Chinese dinner and asked for a rice dish they had eaten during their last visit five months back but whose name they were not able to recollect. After a short while, the waiter returned with the print-out of their five month old bill. Justice D.Y. Chandrachu­d described the entire episode as “scary”.

A statute, Sibal said, has to be “consistent with the provisions of the constituti­on” and citing Section 57 of the Aadhaar Act, 2016 asserted that the provision, it was a person’s choice to produce Aadhaar number to establish their identity.

When Justice Ashok Bhushan said that under the said provision, Aadhaar can be used to establish the identity of the persons under other statutes, Sibal said that any interpreta­tion other than that it was voluntary to use Aadhaar for establishi­ng one’s identity would be “horrendous”.

As Justice Bhushan asked: “What is wrong with one nation, one identity? We are all Indians”, Sibal said: “Yes we are all Indians. Passionate­ly Indian. But we are more than our Aadhaars.”

Further dwelling on his arguments, Sibal said, “Digital world knows more about you, than you know about yourself.” He told the court that there is an app called “moodpanda which rates and tracks your mood” and in a lighter vein told the bench “We would love to use it to see Your Lordships’ mood in the Aadhaar case.”

Hearing will continue on Thursday.

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