http://aadhararticles.blogspot.com/2010/12/964-if-s-and-buts-of-uidai-facenfacts.html964
- If 's and but's of UIDAI-
facenfacts<http://www.facenfacts.com/EditorialDetails/54/if-s-and-buts-of-uidai.htm>
 PLEASE CLICK ON MAIN TITLE TO SEE ORIGINAL ARTICLE Ram Krishna Swamy
 *If 's and but's of UIDAI*
*By Priti Prakash*
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*The UIDAI (Unique Identification Authority of India) which is otherwise
also known by the name of 'Aadhar' in common parlence is another highly
ambitious government scheme popularized to help give a valid identity to the
citizens of India with the larger goal of benefitting the poor and the
marginalized sections of rural India. It will establish their identity and
thereby their inclusion in the mainstream.

The project to encompass the 600 million families under the scheme by
providing each individual an alpha numeric identity number, not a card, mind
you, which would be another addition to his other various identity
credential will enable him to prove that he is a citizen of the country and
so a beneficiary of the government schemes and assistances. Initially
conceptualized just with the identity issue it has seen changes over the
time in its very aim and structure.

Former Infosys head Nandan Nilekani is heading this unspecified mega
expensive scheme whose first phase expenditure is said to be around Rs 3000
million. 'Aadhar' has started rolling with some numbers distributerd in
Maharastra and Tripura's rural belt. The project is progressing phase wise
and will take a long time to actually become a complete success. A
stipulated time of the year 2014 is given to complete the first phase. There
are serious speculations. Why is it that a project that started with a
larger prespective has slowly narrowed down benefitting the rural poor and
marginalized only. If it is that the poor are in a greater identity crisis
well in good.

Mr Nilekani insists that the number will not discriminate citizens. The fact
is that the number is mandatory not compulsory. How does the government then
visualize no discrimination, not just in NREGA but elsewhere too.

Describing it Nandan Nilekani says that it will be just a number that will
be given to the individual which will establish his/her identity based on
biometrics. This will be different from all the other identities like a bank
account, PAN, ration card, passport and the likes which means that now there
is a number that has to be remembered. This number will help the individual
to approach the most convenient and close by vendor or grocery shop owner in
the village or small towns to take a loan from or to check how much is there
in his bank. Now how does a villager or an illiterate supposed to remember
his number? Aren't his priorities different unless this works as some magic
wand in his hand.

The project also has serious concern as regards its accountability towards
people and the Parliament. There is no bill passed in the houses of
Parliament regarding this as such. So how about the fact that if this
government falls the project will still continue or for that matter if Mr
Nandan Nilekani falls off the humor of the next government the project will
have him at the helm of affairs. A 3000 crore rupee venture is resting on
the shoulders of the ruling government. He has no answer. Also that how much
and who is accountable and answerable to the Parliament about its goings.

The budget granted for the project is colossal. What ministry does the
project fall under and where will the allocation come from? These are some
questions that remain unanswered.

Further Mr Nilekani says that the identification number does not establish
citizenship. It only gives an individual an identity and authentication. And
also that a friend or a relative can be an introducer to validate the number
seeker. How about all the immigrants entering India from say Bangladesh. As
they don't have papers to prove their citizenship they would be sure enough
able to procure a number for themselves on the identification by their
Indian friend or relative which goes to say that this Bangladeshi then gets
a number for himself and be highly a resident of this country. Is this how
the way inclusion will work?

Then there are many potential privacy fallouts of this project, not the
least of which is triggered by the Government's official plan to link the
databases together.

The project also entails risks that arise from its centralization which may
come up with possible errors in the collection of information, recording of
inaccurate data, corruption of data from anonymous sources and unauthorized
access to or disclosure of personal information. There are many more similar
risks such as trading and selling of information and India, which has no
generally established data protection laws such as the U.S. Probably Mr
Nilekani has an answer to these and solution for this intricate excercise.
Afterall according to him 'Technology is not a penacea for every problem in
India.'

The other side of the coin, the better one, is that the UID will link a
person's Passport Number, Driving License, PAN card, Bank Accounts, Address,
Voter ID, etc and all this information that will be checked through a
database. So, for example, if someone has different addresses on PAN and
driving license, is liable to get caught. Those who will opt out of this
program may have much inconvenience in doing business, operating bank
accounts and other offices which will require a UID.

The government also claims that problems of rigged state elections,
widespread embezzlement that affects subsidies and poverty alleviation
programs such as NREGA, addressing illegal immigration into India and
terrorist threats is another and the larger goal of the program through UID.
This probably does not figure in any discussions as such. We still have to
see how does the project see all this through. Hope that the good intentions
of the government are brought to good use and results. As Mr Nilekani said
in the Rajendra Prasad Memorial lecture hosted by The Editors Gulid in New
Delhi, 'dont sweat on small things, think larger. It is the delivering and
execution of the project that is the exciting part of it. My challenges are
to come up with an operating model, speed, quality and low cost. ' Good Luck
Mr Nilekani !!!

Priti Prakash*
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-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist

The UID project is going to do almost exactly the same thing which the
predecessors of Hitler did, else how is it that Germany always had the lists

of Jewish names even prior to the arrival of the Nazis? The Nazis got these
lists with the help of IBM which was in the 'census' business that included
racial census that entailed not only count the Jews but also identifying
them. At the United States Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC, there is an
exhibit of an IBM Hollerith D-11 card sorting machine that was responsible
for organising the census of 1933 that first identified the Jews.

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