UPA's pet UID project set to be
trashed<http://mediavigil.blogspot.com/2011/12/upas-pet-uid-project-set-to-be-trashed.html>

UPA'S PET UID PROJECT SET TO BE TRASHED
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Sonia Gandhi hand a tribal woman her UID
card.

A parliamentary
committee<http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/uid-to-be-number-for-life-for-indians-nilekani/1/110619.html>
is
set to reject the National Identification Authority of India Bill 2010,
inflicting a severe blow to Unique Identification Authority of India
chairman Nandan Nilekani and raising doubts about Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh's pet project.

Former IT czar 
Nilekani<http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/nilekanis-uids-will-aid-illegal-immigrants/1/114255.html>,
who holds cabinet minister rank as UIDAI
chief<http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/nandan-nilekani-public-distribution-system/1/158465.html>,
had been keen on the enactment of the Bill so that a statutory National
Identification Authority could be established. The Bill, tabled in December
last year, is geared to bolster the Aadhaar scheme under which every Indian
" resident" will be assigned a unique ID (UID) number.

Parliament's standing committee on finance, headed by Yashwant Sinha of the
BJP, held deliberations on the controversial Bill for a year. Among those
it consulted were experts and representatives of government departments.
Nilekani had also appeared before the parliamentary committee and given his
views on the subject.

The committee's draft report giving the thumbs down to the Bill is ready
and will be adopted on Thursday. Sources in the panel indicated that the
decision to recommend that the government should withdraw the present Bill
and bring a new one was taken "unanimously". Even Congress members found
the project "directionless".

It is learnt that the draft report has recommended that the government
should review or reconsider the project by a bringing in a fresh Bill. The
committee has said that the Bill and the project are not acceptable in the
present form.

So far, over 5.75 million UID cards have been issued countrywide. The
cumulative revised budget estimates of the project, launched in 2009, is Rs
1,660 crore for 2010- 11 and 2011-12 put together. More than Rs 556 crore
has already been spent on the scheme.

The project has also been opposed by the finance ministry, the home
ministry and the Planning Commission, further strengthening the committee's
reservations to the bigticket scheme.

Sources in the panel indicated that MPs like S. S Ahluwalia (BJP), Gurudas
Dasgupta (CPI), Bhartruhari Mahtab (BJD) and Rashid Alvi (Congress) were
most vocal in opposing the scheme. The draft report is of the view that the
UID scheme has been conceptualised with no clarity or purpose.The standing
committee's draft report on the legislation also reportedly noted that the
project is riddled with serious lacunae in its content and execution.

It is, however, up to the government to accept or reject the report of the
standing committee in full or in part.

The project had faced opposition on four main counts - inclusion of "
residents" as opposed to "citizens"; issues related to privacy of those
being assigned the UID numbers; duplication of the work being done for
preparing the National Population Register ( NPR) using the same biometric
attributes; and the massive expenditure that the project entails.

The committee felt that the ongoing implementation of the project is
"directionless". Sources said the panel is of the view that there is
confusion within the government and the implementing agency on the funding,
technology, privacy aspects and implementation of the project.

The standing committee on finance "strongly disapproved" of the " hasty
manner" in which the scheme is being implemented. The committee, sources
said, feared that since private organisations and individuals are involved
in the implementation process, the data collected for Aadhaar could end up
in the hands of private players and misused.

The committee has questioned the technology used in Aadhaar. The draft
report is learnt to have termed the technology as "unreliable and
untested". It has also cited the experience of foreign countries with
similar schemes and said that many European nations withdrew their UID
projects after opposition from the public. Noting such discrepancies, the
committee has recommended that the Bill is not acceptable.

The committee is learnt to have noted the opposition by finance ministry,
home ministry and Planning Commission to the project.The finance ministry
has reportedly expressed concern at the " lack of coordination" with the
implementing agency and the government. The ministry is learnt to have told
the panel that this lack of coordination is leading to duplication of
efforts and adding to the expenditure of the project.

The home ministry is learnt to have criticised the efficacy of the
interlocutor system in implementing Aadhaar. The ministry has reportedly
pointed out that the project can create a security concern as "somebody
interested" can identify a citizen using the project.

The plan panel also objected to the project. Incidentally, the UIDAI is at
present working under the Planning Commission.Starting as a small office in
Yojana Bhavan, the authority shifted its headquarters to a multistoried
complex in Connaught Place while opening regional offices across the
country.

The standing committee's report is likely to be adopted without any dissent
notes."Key ministries are opposed to the project. Members, cutting across
party lines, have raised concerns in the implementation," a member of the
panel said.

A.M JIGEESH | New Delhi, December 8, 2011 | 08:26
URL for this article :http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/upaâ
€™s-pet-uid-project-trashed-by-house-panel-nandan-nilekani/1/163250.html

-- 
Gopal Krishna
Citizens Forum for Civil Liberties (CFCL)
ToxicsWatch Alliance
New Delhi
Mb: 9818089660
Skype id: witnesskrishna
E-mail:krishna1...@gmail.com

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