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What Are The Safeguards Put In Place To Protect Personal Data, Supreme Court Asks UIDAI

Justice DY Chandrachud, one of the five judges on the Constitution bench, said: “If you apply for a job, the first thing they ask is your address proof, and salary is admitted to a private bank.”

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What Are The Safeguards Put In Place To Protect Personal Data, Supreme Court Asks UIDAI
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Hearing the matter related to the constitutional validity of linking Aadhaar card to a number of government schemes, the Supreme Court on Thursday asked petitioners what was their problem in sharing address proof with the government when they had no issue sharing such inputs with private insurance or mobile companies.

"You want insurance policy, you go to a private company. You want mobile connection, you go to private entities and part with personal information... Here the government has multiplied the options... The moment the government asks you to give proof of address and other details, you have a problem and you say 'sorry'," the Constitution bench said.

Justice DY Chandrachud, one of the five judges on the Constitution bench, said: “If you apply for a job, the first thing they ask is your address proof, and salary is admitted to a private bank.”

The argument was made during the hearing on the Aadhaar issue by senior advocate Shyam Divan before the bench headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra.

Justice AK Sikri told Divan, who was appearing for the petitioners, that “your argument seems to be that if I give my passbook, they will come to know my transactions. I don’t think that is the case,” reported The Indian Express.

To this, Divan responded saying "There is no problem per se with an individual parting with private information on his own. The point here is that you are being asked to part with information to someone you do not know and have no contractual relation with."

At this, Justice Chandrachud said the court would like to know what safeguards were put in place by Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) to protect personal data, added the newspaper report.

Divan, who is representing petitioners such as former Karnataka HC judge Justice KS Puttaswamy, several activists Aruna Roy, Shantha Sinha and veteran CPI(M) leader VS Achuthanandan, submitted that the State cannot compel its citizens to give personal information, that too to a private company, as it violated their fundamental rights.

Referring to the legal position with regard to the national population census, he said it has been made clear that the personal and demographic details of citizens collected during census were being protected, but in case of Aadhaar, there was no such safeguard.

Divan said the private party was "so much outside the control of the Unique Identification Authority of India" that they can use it for their own commercial purposes.

"Moreover, there is no binding contract between the UIDAI and private agencies employed to collect biometric and other details for granting Aadhaar numbers," Divan said.

During the day-long hearing, Divan referred to the contents of the Aadhaar enrolment form which said that people, getting enrolled, were parting with information voluntarily.

However, if a person refuses to part with certain details while getting enrolled, the software simply refuses to register the person, he said, adding that word 'voluntary' was "meaningless".

Terming the scheme as "unconstitutional from beginning to end", Divan said that initially the State was not authorised to compel the citizens to part with personal information and moreover, it became more troublesome when people were asked to share them with private firms.

At the time of enrolment when persons are asked to share details like bank accounts and mobile numbers besides the biometric details, no government officials are there to guide the citizens whose details are being secured by private entities, the senior lawyer said.

Divan referred to recent sting operations by some TV channels showing certain private firms engaged in Aadhaar enrolments, were willing to share personal information of citizens in lieu of money.

In a digitised world, the government has to be "an ally of the citizens and not their adversary" and it must ensure that the privacy interests of citizens are protected against national and overseas corporations, Divan said.

Highlighting the alleged malady of the Aadhaar system, he said it would lead to profiling and surveillance of citizens from birth to death.

He also referred to the recent nine-judge bench judgement holding privacy as the fundamental right and said it was delivered in the Aadhaar case and said the procedure for deprivation of this right must be "just, fair, and reasonable."

Divan said the judgement grounded privacy in ideas of "dignity and autonomy" and it made the preamble to the Indian Constitution central to the concept of fundamental rights. "A constitutional democracy survives when citizens have confidence that the rule of law will prevail," he said.

The advancing of arguments remained inconclusive and would resume on January 23.

Earlier, Divan had termed Aadhaar as "an electronic leash" and said the government could completely destroy an individual by "switching off" the 12-digit unique identifier number.

However, the bench had asked whether the state "cannot say that it has every right to find out the number of schools, children or the real beneficiaries of a welfare scheme and verify the real beneficiaries of huge funds which it is spending, it needs Aadhaar number. This is a valid argument."

The apex court had on December 15 last year extended till March 31 the deadline for mandatory linking of Aadhaar with various services and welfare schemes of all ministries and departments of the Centre, states and union territories.

(With agency inputs)