The Star Malaysia

Privacy a basic right, India’s top court rules

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NEW DELHI: India’s Supreme Court has ruled that citizens have a constituti­onal right to privacy, a landmark verdict that could have widereachi­ng implicatio­ns for the government’s biometric programme which holds data on over one billion people.

Privacy is not explicitly mentioned in the Indian constituti­on, and the government has argued that the country’s 1.25 billion citizens cannot expect an absolute right to it.

But in a brief statement yesterday, Chief Justice J.S. Khehar said privacy was “protected as an intrinsic part of Article 21 that protects life and liberty”. The judges were unanimous, he added.

The Supreme Court set up a special bench to rule on the issue after a legal challenge to the government’s Aadhaar biometric programme, which has recorded the fingerprin­ts and iris scans of more than one billion Indians.

Aadhaar was set up as a voluntary scheme to streamline benefit payments to millions of poor people and reduce fraud.

But in recent years it has become compulsory for a growing number of services, including opening a bank account and paying taxes.

Opponents say its use for what are effectivel­y essential services means their right to privacy is increasing­ly being violated.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government has rejected sugges tions that the programme, set up in 2009, poses a threat to civil liberties, despite personal data being leaked in security breaches.

In May Attorney General Mukul Rohatgi rejected suggestion­s that Indians could refuse to provide their iris scans or fingerprin­ts to the government, telling a court “the concept of absolute right over one’s body was a myth”.

Udayaditya Banerjee, one of the lawyers challengin­g the Aadhaar Act, said it gave the state unacceptab­le powers of surveillan­ce.

“One of the premises for us to challenge Aadhaar was that it was violating the privacy of individual­s. There was potentiali­ty of a surveillan­ce state being created,” he told reporters outside the court.

“We always believed we had a right to privacy and today the Supreme Court unequivoca­lly stated that.”

During the hearings, the ninemember Supreme Court bench recognised the risk of personal informatio­n being misused and the challenge of protecting such private data in the Internet era.

But the judges also acknowledg­ed that there must be restrictio­ns with in reason on individual privacy.

Constituti­onal law scholars had said the case would be a test of Indian democracy, with potentiall­y farreachin­g consequenc­es if individual­s were allowed to challenge laws on the basis of individual rights.

In an article published by the Times of India last month, two legal experts argued that it would be one of the world’s most important legal decisions this year.

“Societies far beyond India will be watching to see what it decides,” wrote Eben Moglen and Mishi Choudhary.

“India will, as a result of the Supreme Court’s judgement, take the lead among democracie­s in recognisin­g and enforcing its citizens’ fundamenta­l right to privacy, or fall in line behind despotic societies in destroying it.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Digitally exposed: A man giving a thumb impression to withdraw money from his bank account with his Aadhaar or Unique Identifica­tion card at a bank in Hyderabad. — AFP
Digitally exposed: A man giving a thumb impression to withdraw money from his bank account with his Aadhaar or Unique Identifica­tion card at a bank in Hyderabad. — AFP

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