Business Standard

AADHAAR DATA KEPT BEHIND 13-FT HIGH WALLS: AG TO SC

- MAYANK JAIN

On the first day of the Union government’s arguments in the final Aadhaar case hearing, AttorneyGe­neral (A-G) K K Venugopal appeared in front of a five-judge constituti­onal Bench of the Supreme Court (SC). While arguing that Aadhaar data remains safe and secure, the A-G said that the Aadhaar data remains secure behind a complex that has 13-feet high, 5-feet thick walls.

The A-G based his arguments on better welfare targeting due to Aadhaar and said that because of privacy concerns of a few, people cannot be denied efficient, transparen­t delivery of services. In a first, he further pushed for putting up two LCD screens inside the courtroom so that the Unique Identifica­tion Authority of India Chief Executive Officer Ajay Bhushan Pandey can give a “practical presentati­on” in an open court on Thursday.

The judges, meanwhile, asked the A-G to first argue on the legal contention­s first and asked the government to respond to all the arguments made by the petitioner­s.

The petitioner­s argued for 19 days in court and challenged the constituti­onality of Aadhaar on various fronts, including privacy concerns, data breaches and exclusion of a large population from availing of services and subsidies due to failure of Aadhaar systems or non-availabili­ty of the unique identifica­tion number.

Started in 2009, the unique identifica­tion system has captured the demographi­c and biometric details of almost 1.19 billion citizens, according to official data. The government argued it was purely voluntary till September 2016. So, the question of coercion does not arise.

The SC Bench, however, said there is a clash between the right to life and the

IT CANNOT BE DOUBTED THAT WITH UID/ AADHAAR, MUCH OF THE MALAISE IN THIS FIELD CAN BE TAKEN CARE OF” K K VENUGOPAL, Attorney-General

right to privacy, with people being excluded from accessing services for want of an Aadhaar number.

Justice Sikri cited multiple affidavits filed in the court, which corroborat­e the same. Sikri also said that those who signed up till 2016 did not give their informed consent for Aadhaar to be used for delivering welfare and subsidies.

According to lawyers present inside the courtroom, the A- G also cited the famous Rajiv Gandhi statement claiming that out of ~1 sent for welfare, only 15 paise reaches the poor. To this, Sikri joked that this claim was rebutted by economists later and 17 paise reaches the poor instead of 15 paise. “It cannot be doubted that with UID/Aadhaar, much of the malaise in this field can be taken care of,” the A- G stated in his 51-page written submission to the SC. The submission also argued that Aadhaar can be used to help combat terrorism and maintain law and order.

“Aadhaar, or UID, which has come to be known as the most advanced and sophistica­ted infrastruc­ture, may facilitate law enforcemen­t agencies to take care of the problem of terrorism to some extent and may also be helpful in checking crime and help investigat­ing agencies in cracking the crimes,” the statement said.

In arguing for making Aadhaar mandatory for services, he said that 300 million people in India are poor and they cannot be denied services just because a few people are concerned about privacy.

He also said that the reported deaths in Jharkhand due to Aadhaar were actually not so as one of those dead had ~30,000 in their bank account; they could not have died of starvation.

While the SC had earlier passed an interim order staying the linking of Aadhaar with mobile phones, bank accounts and other services except government subsidies, the final outcome of the case is expected to determine the legality and validity of the unique identifica­tion number and whether it will remain mandatory to obtain and link with services or not. Before the court rose for the day, Justice D Y Chandrachu­d observed that financial exclusion is a reality in the country which cannot be denied.

“We should acknowledg­e that there is a problem of financial exclusion in our country. The Cabinet secretary had agreed. To say that someone has not come to court therefore there is no exclusion is wrong,” he said.

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