http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/goa/Now-Aruna-slams-UID-says-it-may-aid-communal-targeting/articleshow/10383321.cms

<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/goa/Now-Aruna-slams-UID-says-it-may-aid-communal-targeting/articleshow/10383321.cms>
Now, Aruna slams UID, says it may aid communal targetingKrish Fernandes,
TNN | Oct 17, 2011, 05.40AM IST

PANAJI: A day after slamming Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on an RTI remark,
National Advisory Council member Aruna Roy termed the Aadhaar unique
identity project "an invasive act" and warned the UID data "will facilitate
communal targeting of certain communities".

Magsaysay award winner Roy said, "The UID is a dangerous thing. I'm shocked
minorities and other communities are not boycotting it." Roy was speaking at
an RTI seminar held at the International Centre Goa, Dona Paula.

While the central government and UIDAI chief Nandan Nilekani have claimed
that the UID will eliminate corruption in the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural
Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA), and the public distribution system
(PDS), Roy said, "We have doubts about any of these devices (such as
UID)...technology will not work (to curb corruption)."

Continuing with her cenure of the UID, Roy wondered: "How can you force the
people to give all this information? The real intention of UID was
integration with the National Intelligence Grid (NATGRID). There should be a
political debate on whether the state should collect all data about us and
store it in a central silo."

Claiming that there was talk about the government thinking of permitting DNA
sampling, Roy said "What is the point of giving us various freedoms on one
hand and then undermining them (through projects like UID) on the other
hand?" She felt the government "is trying to lull us" into believing they
are bringing these projects to benefit us.

Krish Fernandes | tnn

Panaji: Hinting at private interests being one reason behind UID, National
Advisory Council member Aruna Roy disclosed that many of the MoUs for the
Aadhaar unique identity project were signed before the (UID) law. "There is
a definite agenda to push (implementation) before legislation," said Roy.
She opined that MoUs of many other projects were also being signed in a
similar manner, while speaking at a n RTI seminar at Dona Paula.

Nikhil Dey, co-convener of the National Campaign for People's Right to
Information, too termed the UID as "an extremely dangerous thing" and felt
"we have to be wary of it".

Dey said UIDAI chief Nandan Nilekani had assured that the UID would be
completely optional. "But now with UID being linked to the NREGA, how is
this optional?" he questioned.

Dey observed that through the UID, all the information on citizens was
available at the click of a button. "Localised biometric systems may be
understandable, but we don't need a central database," Dey noted.

"People are queuing up to get their UID numbers as they feel they won't get
access to government schemes and programmes," he concluded.


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