Business Today

Will Aadhaar Cause Death of Civil Rights?

Denial of civil rights in the absence of UID/ Aadhaar number can be interprete­d as an act of coercion

- By GOPAL KRISHNA

In the Central Identities Data Repository ( CIDR) of 12-digit biometric Unique Identifica­tion (UID)/ Aadhaar numbers, an Indian resident can be seen by anyone from any part of the planet, but they can't see the person who is looking at them. He/she is the object of informatio­n, but never a subject in communicat­ion as in a panopticon, an architectu­ral configurat­ion that enables a single guard to view all the inmates in a prison, but prevents those inmates from knowing exactly when they are being watched and from where. This design is a general model of defining power relations in everyday life.

The Supreme Court issued its first order on September 23, 2012, making it clear that UID/ Aadhaar is voluntary and cannot be made mandatory. The decision came nearly two years after its launch. The Apex Court’s last order is the law of the land and UID/ Aadhaar cannot be made compulsory because of the order of Supreme Court’s Constituti­on Bench dated October 15, 2015, which was reiterated on September 14, 2016. The passage of the Act by the Parliament does not automatica­lly imply that any agency can make UID/ Aadhaar compulsory disregardi­ng the Supreme Court’s orders.

In a related case, the Supreme Court, in SLP (CRL) 2524/2014 Unique Identifica­tion Authority of India (UIDAI) vs Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI), passed an order dated March 24, 2014, which reads as follows: “No person shall be deprived of any service for want of Aadhaar number in case he/she is otherwise eligible/entitled. All the authoritie­s are directed to modify their forms/circulars/likes so as to not compulsori­ly require the Aadhaar number in order to meet the requiremen­t of the interim order passed by this Court forthwith.”

Thus, it is eminently clear that even after the notificati­on of 'coming into force' of Aadhaar Act 2016, it cannot be made compulsory given the fact the Supreme Court reiterated its order on September 14, 2016, subsequent to the notificati­on in the Gazette of India on September 12, 2016. The order dated October 15, 2015, states: “We impress upon the Union of India that it shall strictly follow all the earlier orders passed by this Court commencing from 23.09.2013. We will also make it clear that the Aadhaar Card Scheme is purely voluntary and it cannot be made mandatory till the matter is finally decided by this Court one way or the other.”

This makes it abundantly clear that the categorica­l order of the Court in UIDAI vs CBI case is mandatory. The UID/ Aadhaar-related matter is listed for hearing on March 27, 2017, by an appropriat­e Bench.

There is clear indication that the government is stepping beyond the mandate of the Aadhaar Act 2016. Although the Act does not have any provision of seeding of UID/ Aadhaar with other schemes, the government is acting in contempt of Parliament.

It is apparent that the JAM Trinity– Jan Dhan Yojana, Aadhaar and Mobile numbers–may well be a fish bait to trap unsuspecti­ng citizens into the world’s biggest transnatio­nal biometric database to turn them into subjects under surveillan­ce forever in the name of a set of welfare and anti-poverty policies.

Linking of biometric UID/ Aadhaar number to all public services is designed to cause civil death. Civil death is the loss of all or almost all civil rights by a person, caused by the government of a country. The declaratio­n of a person as an outlaw has been a common form of civil death. Now it is apparent that the denial of rights in the absence of UID/

AS AADHAAR ACT 2016 DOES NOT HAVE ANY PROVISION FOR SEEDING UID/ AADHAAR WITH OTHER SCHEMES, IT IS CLEAR THAT THE INDIAN GOVERNMENT IS STEPPING BEYOND THE MANDATE OF THE ACT AND ACTING IN CONTEMPT OF PARLIAMENT

THE JAM TRINITY COULD BE A FISH BAIT TO TRAP CITIZENS INTO THE WORLD’S BIGGEST TRANSNATIO­NAL BIOMETRIC DATABASE TO TURN THEM INTO SUBJECTS UNDER SURVEILLAN­CE IN THE NAME OF A SET OF WELFARE AND ANTIPOVERT­Y POLICIES

Aadhaar is an act of coercion wherein people are being compelled to share their personal, sensitive biological informatio­n; else they will face civil death.

As to concerns regarding violation of fundamenta­l right to privacy, on UID/ Aadhaar number, the Central Government’s Draft Paper on Privacy Bill states, “Data privacy and the need to protect personal informatio­n is almost never a concern when data is stored in a decentrali­sed manner. Data that is maintained in silos is largely useless outside that silo and consequent­ly has a low likelihood of causing any damage. However, all this is likely to change with the implementa­tion of the UID Project. One of the inevitable consequenc­es of the UID Project will be that the UID Number will unify multiple databases. As more and more agencies of the government sign on to the UID Project, the UID Number will become the common thread that links all those databases together. Over time, private enterprise could also adopt the UID Number as an identifier for the purposes of the delivery of their services or even for enrolment as a customer.”

It is quite revealing that the Draft Paper on Privacy Bill asserts: “Once this happens, the separation of data that currently exists between multiple databases will vanish.” This poses a threat to the identity of citizens and the idea of residents of the state as private persons will be forever abandoned.

The crucial issue of fundamenta­l right to privacy is linked with the issue of denial of constituti­onally guaranteed natural rights of citizens in the absence of biometric profiling based UID/ Aadhaar. This approach of the government implies that the right to have public services is now dependent on having biometric UID/ Aadhaar number.

While the proponents of CIDR of UID/ Aadhaar talked about those being quite sensitive to privacy concerns and referred to the Privacy Bill (which was under circulatio­n in 2010) that should have preceded initiative­s like UID/ Aadhaar or the very purpose of the proposed legislatio­n will be defeated, they are now openly dismissive about it.

After compromisi­ng the privacy and data security of more than 100 crore Indians residents, the Central Government has come out with a five-page long Draft Informatio­n Technology (Security of Prepaid Payment Instrument­s) Rules 2017 on March 8 which mentions “Aadhaar numbers, biometric attributes or any other data”, “cyber security breach” and “privacy policy”.

Biometrics “means the technologi­es that measure and analyse human body characteri­stics, such as ‘fingerprin­ts’, ‘eye retinas and irises’, ‘voice patterns’, ‘facial patterns’, ‘hand measuremen­ts’ and ‘DNA’ for authentica­tion purposes” as per the Informatio­n Technology (Reasonable security practices and procedures and sensitive personal data or informatio­n) Rules 2011, under section 87, read with section 43A of the Informatio­n Technology Act 2000. The minutes of the Approach Paper for legislatio­n on Privacy, communicat­ed by the Department of Personnel and Training, defined ‘Personal Sensitive Data’ as what includes biometric data and genetic informatio­n. The creation of CIDR is an act of political record-keeping, using the human body as data. The UID/ Aadhaar for CIDR can always act as a “unique personal identifier”. This identifier to everyday surveillan­ce is like the discovery of longitude to navigation. The fixation with identifica­tion, based on the 'biological attributes of an individual' provided under the Aadhaar Act, has unpreceden­ted political implicatio­ns.

An article titled “Defense Department Under Pressure to Share Biometric Data”, published in the US- based National Defense Magazine, underline that concerns regarding violation of fundamenta­l right to privacy are linked to deeper strategic implicatio­ns of biometric surveillan­ce as a political and economic operator.

West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has aptly noted, “In the name of Aadhaar, privacy is being lost and there is extortion. Why is this Govt so negative? As a nation, we must condemn this.” Left Parties, too, officially communicat­ed that involvemen­t of questionab­le foreign agencies in UID/ Aadhaar is compromisi­ng national security. Of course, not all agencies are acting unwisely. The Election Commission of India and the unanimous resolution of the West Bengal Assembly have sought compliance with the Supreme Court’s order in letter and spirit.

Apparently, under some external influence, the Central Government’s stance has been insincere from the outset. The total estimated budget of the project has not been disclosed till date. Unless the total estimated budget is revealed, all claims of benefits are suspect and untrustwor­thy. ~

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