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More than 1.12 billion Indians – 88.2% of the population – have now been enrolled for Aadhaar, India’s controversial biometric national identity programme. An IndiaSpend analysis of a government law that came into effect without much public attention six months ago reveals how the government plans to sign up the remainder of the population.
A 2 November 2016 circular from the cabinet secretariat used two sections of the Aadhaar (Targeted Delivery of Financial and Other Subsidies, Benefits and Services) Act of 2016 to make it mandatory for citizens to provide an Aadhaar number to benefit from schemes and services paid for from the Consolidated Fund of India.
This fund, the most important of all government accounts, receives all government revenues and is the source of most government spending nationwide, by central as well as state governments. The new Aadhaar law thus brings almost every government expenditure under the Aadhaar ambit.
The 12-digit, biometric Aadhaar unique identification (UID) number, meant to be a voluntary enrollment, will soon be compulsory to receive benefits under 530 welfare schemes and to perform a host of activities including filing income-tax returns, receiving college degrees and obtaining driver’s licenses.
The 2 November 2016 circular directed all secretaries to the Government of India to ask central ministries and state governments to “expeditiously” identify schemes that can use Aadhaar as “primary identification.”
It offered detailed instructions on how to ensure these moves would stick:
This contradicts the SC’s 27 March 2017 order that the government can demand enrollment with Aadhaar for accessing general public services, but cannot make it compulsory for claiming benefits under social welfare programmes. “For benefits, it [Aadhaar] cannot be pressed…for non-benefits, it can be done,” Chief Justice of India JS Khehar said, reiterating the apex court’s previous orders that had said Aadhaar would not be mandatory for obtaining benefits otherwise due to citizens.
Although the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), the statutory body collecting Aadhaar data and issuing UID numbers, claims Aadhaar is a voluntary identification option, the programme’s mission statement says Aadhaar is expected to form “the basic, universal identity infrastructure” for “registrars, government and other service providers across the country.”
Supporters of the programme rubbish privacy concerns, pointing out the number does not carry details on an individual’s religion, caste, tribe, ethnicity, language, records of entitlement, income or medical history – nothing beyond information contained in other proofs of identity, many of which are in the public domain.
So far, 530 social welfare programmes from 63 ministries – of nearly 1,200 schemes from 75 ministries – are ready to be linked to Aadhaar, according to the government’s Direct Benefits Transfer (DBT) Mission website.
The DBT has already undertaken “an exhaustive exercise,” communicating with various ministries and departments to identify “approximately 500 schemes” capable of notifying the use of Aadhaar – in consultation with UIDAI – under Section 7 of the Aadhaar Act, the cabinet secretariat said in its 2 November circular.
The applicable welfare schemes range from the Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan (“education for all programme”) to the Swadhar Greh scheme (for women in difficult circumstances) and the maternity benefit programme.
They also include housing subsidies for a range of workers – beedi makers, limestone and dolomite workers – and those involved in mining iron, manganese and chrome ores.
For non-welfare schemes, apart from filing taxes, Aadhaar will soon be mandatory for, among others:
The Act provides for Aadhaar to be the primary identification tool for services that do not use funds from the Consolidated Fund of India, “such as issue of SIM cards, KYC (know your customer identification) for opening bank accounts, pension accounts etc.,” the circular said.
Thus, while not declaring Aadhaar mandatory, these laws ensure individuals using government programmes and services provide Aadhaar as proof of identity or furnish an Aadhaar enrollment slip, or provide a temporary photo identification (such as a driver’s license or voter identity card) until they get an Aadhaar UID. If the individual has still not enrolled for the UID programme, the agency concerned may even become a UIDAI registrar to help them do so.
Amid controversy and in seeming violation of a 2015 Supreme Court order, on 22 March 2017, the Lok Sabha passed the Finance Bill with 40 amendments. One of these includes a clause that makes it mandatory for Aadhaar to be linked to bank accounts and permanent account numbers (PAN) for filing taxes. The Bill also sets a deadline of 1 July 2017 after which unlinked PAN cards will be deemed invalid.
The 2017 Finance Bill, however, contains numerous amendments to non-tax and -finance legislation, such as the Aadhaar-related provisions, which has made it highly controversial. The Aadhaar (Targeted Delivery of Financial and Other Subsidies, Benefits and Services) Bill of 2016 had also been passed in Parliament through the money bill route.
The Aadhaar-related aspects of the 2017 Finance Bill, particularly, have sparked controversy because they conflict with an August 2015 SC order, in which the court had stated: “The production of an Aadhaar card will not be condition for obtaining any benefits otherwise due to a citizen.”
In October 2015, the court had modified this order to allow Aadhaar to be used for the following schemes too: the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS), the National Social Assistance Programme (Old Age Pensions, Widow Pensions, Disability Pensions), the Prime Minister’s Jan Dhan Yojana and the Employees’ Provident Fund Organisation.
Nevertheless, the SC had maintained that Aadhaar is “purely voluntary” and it could not be made mandatory “till the matter is finally decided by this Court one way or the other.”
Yet, in January 2017, the government made Aadhaar enrollment mandatory for beneficiaries of the Employees’ Pension Scheme and MGNREGS, having enacted a new Aadhaar law four months earlier to preempt a legal challenge. Since then, it has made a growing number of services provided by government agencies and private enterprises conditional on providing one’s Aadhaar number.
The November 2016 cabinet circular and the accompanying UIDAI guidelines for “notifying the use of Aadhaar” show the government’s resolve to use Aadhaar as the “primary identifier” for all schemes and services. The document also includes a circular from the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas for “ready-reference.”
Condition precedent, a term used mostly in contractual law, refers to an implied stipulation in a contract that one contracting party must perform on its part before it can demand performance from the other. In other words, the circular implied that citizens must enroll for Aadhaar as identity proof to be able to avail of services or benefits.
However, the circular says such subsidies and benefits should not be denied to anyone who does not have an Aadhaar number; such persons can provide temporary enrollment details of Aadhaar, or an alternative photo identity card, bank passbook, etc. until an Aadhaar number is obtained.
In a subsequent cabinet secretariat meeting on 24 November 2016 to discuss notifying Aadhaar for various schemes, the legal affairs department of the law ministry “advised” those present that the Aadhaar Act does not “necessarily mandate” issuing a notification for using Aadhaar as a primary identifier.
However, UIDAI chief executive officer, Ajay Bhushan Pandey, reiterated the programme’s guidelines, adding that the UIDAI will take responsibility for getting the draft notification vetted by the law ministry, the minutes of the meeting show.
(The original article was published in IndiaSpend.in)
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