Business Standard

Govt to sort out Aadhaar glitches

Mobile-based OTP, coupons, and offline transactio­ns in case of authentica­tion failure approved

- SAHIL MAKKAR & SHINE JACOB

The death of an 11-year-old girl in Jharkhand after her family was denied food because their ration card was not linked to Aadhaar has forced the Union government to come out with an alternativ­e delivery mechanism for social welfare schemes.

The mechanism includes use of coupons, card-based offline transactio­ns and one-time passwords sent to the mobile phones of beneficiar­ies for verificati­on. The government will soon launch a few pilot projects to assess the viability of these new measures.

Currently, the Union government, which has made Aadhaar mandatory for all its social welfare schemes, is facing problems on two counts. First, there are beneficiar­ies who are yet to be provided with Aadhaar, a 12-digit unique identity number, or have not linked their Aadhaar with welfare schemes. Thenthere is a set of people who are either not receiving government subsidies because of connectivi­ty issues or because their fingerprin­ts do not match during the verificati­on process.

“The authentica­tion failure is around 13-15 per cent. Poor connectivi­ty is responsibl­e for 10 per cent of the cases. And in less than five per cent of cases, the biometrics of individual­s did not match with the UIDAI database,” said an official who was privy to a review meeting in the Prime Minister’s Office last month.

This alternativ­e mechanism is expected to remain in place till the time every panchayat in the country is provided broadband coverage. The government expects to complete this exercise by 2018. The official said the high-level meeting was called in the wake of the tragic death of an 11-year-old girl in Jharkhand on September 28. Her family had alleged that it was denied rations for months and their ration card was cancelled because it was not linked to Aadhaar. According to sources, Aadhaar seeding is less than 50 per cent in social welfare schemes related to food and fertiliser­s.

“We have directed Union ministries and other government agencies to ensure that no beneficiar­y is denied benefits in the absence of Aadhaar, connectivi­ty issues and failure of authentica­tion. The heads in the ministries have been asked to take strict action against erring officials if any beneficiar­y is found not to be receiving benefits,” the official said.

“This will be a temporary measure till the time a beneficiar­y is enrolled in the system and other issues are sorted out. Officials have to maintain a separate register for such cases and it has to be reviewed by their senior colleagues in order to prevent leakages,” the official added.

The Union government has also asked its ministries and state government­s to design their own protocols to provide services to beneficiar­ies who can not visit centres. “The state government­s can use the help of self-help groups or use their own people,” the official said.

The government will soon ask individual­s to visit Aadhaar data centres, to be opened in post offices and banks, and update their database with mobile numbers. This is different from the government directive where individual­s have to visit telecom operators to link their phone numbers with Aadhaar by February 8. Currently, there is no mechanism through which the UIDAI can access data of the mobile operators. The government believes that updating the UIDAI database with mobile numbers will not be difficult, as around 43 per cent of the people had provided their mobile numbers at the time of enrolment.

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