Khaleej Times

Aadhaar a threat to basic rights: Amnesty

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new delhi — The government’s mandatory biometric identifica­tion project Aadhaar could lead to millions of people being denied access to essential services and benefits in violation of their human rights while also raising serious concerns about violations of the right to privacy, Amnesty Internatio­nal India and Human Rights Watch said.

They said the government should order an independen­t investigat­ion of the concerns raised about Aadhaar, and cease targeting journalist­s and researcher­s who expose vulnerabil­ities in security, privacy, and protection of data.

In a joint statement, the two organisati­ons said that as per August 2017 Supreme Court ruling, right to privacy was part of the constituti­onal right to life and personal liberty

The government has a legal and moral obligation to ensure that nobody is denied their rights simply because they don’t have an Aadhaar card Aakar Patel, Amnesty Internatio­nal India’s executive director

and is also protected under the Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to which India is party.

“The government’s push for mandatory enrolment and its efforts to link the Aadhaar number to a wide range of services raises grave concerns that it could disproport­ionately interfere with the right to privacy for millions of people.

“It has also prompted fears of increased state surveillan­ce, with the convergenc­e of various databases making it easier for the government to track all informatio­n about specific individual­s, and to target dissent. “These fears are heightened by the absence of laws to protect privacy and data protection in India, and the lack of adequate judicial or parliament­ary oversight over the activities of intelligen­ce agencies,” it added.

Amnesty Internatio­nal India’s executive director Aakar Patel said: “Making an Aadhaar card a prerequisi­te to access essential services and benefits can obstruct access to several constituti­onal rights, including the rights of people to food, health care, education and social security.”

The Aadhaar project is run by the Unique Identifica­tion Authority of India (UIDAI) which collects personal and biometric data such as fingerprin­ts, facial photograph­s, and iris scans, and issues 12-digit individual­ised identity numbers. Aadhaar was initially meant to be voluntary, aimed at eliminatin­g fraud in welfare programmes and giving people a form of identifica­tion.

However, the Aadhaar Act of 2016 and subsequent notificati­ons and licensing agreements increased the scope of the project, making Aadhaar enrolment mandatory for people to access a range of essential services and benefits including government subsidies, pensions and scholarshi­ps. It has also been linked to services such as banking, insurance, telephone, and the Internet. —

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