[The first class of questions before the court relates to matters of the
everyday life of a democratic government and how it ought to look. These
arguments posit that Aadhaar conflicts with both constitutional structure
and process. They rest on the notion that only democratic processes can
yield democratic and constitutionally defensible outcomes. They are a call
for a government that operates in good faith.
...
The second class of questions that the petitions pending before the court
 have raised relates to questions of whether, and how far, the Aadhaar
programme affects our constitutional rights. These legal criticisms centre
mainly on the right to privacy and the disproportionate degree of
interference with it because of Aadhaar’s data collection, retention and
aggregation policies.
Aadhaar’s capacity to serve as an unchecked instrument of mass and secret
surveillance is evident from three circumstances.]

http://www.caravanmagazine.in/vantage/aadhaar-violates-democratic-process-constitutional-rights

The Aadhaar Programme Violates Democratic Process And Constitutional Rights
By UJWALA UPPALURI <http://www.caravanmagazine.in/profile/23299> | 5 April
2017
JONATHAN TORGOVNIK/GETTY IMAGES

Tax-paying Indians now face a choice between obtaining an Aadhaar card to
comply or being ascribed the status of a criminal.
PreviousNext

   -
   
<http://www.caravanmagazine.in/vantage/aadhaar-violates-democratic-process-constitutional-rights#>


It is difficult to understate the scale and significance of Aadhaar, the
government’s programme for a national identification card for every Indian.
More than one billion
<http://pib.nic.in/newsite/PrintRelease.aspx?relid=138555> Indians have
already been enrolled, and their personally identifiable
information—biometrics, bank-account and demographic details—are already
held in a government database, the legality and security of which is
contested. Disagreements about Aadhaar are disagreements about no less than
what it means to be a citizen in a democratic state, as the unfolding
litigation challenging the Aadhaar programme attests.

Several petitions challenging Aadhaar are pending before the Supreme Court.
Until the court pronounces its final judgment on the programme’s legality,
this much is clear from its previous orders: enrolment into Aadhaar is “purely
voluntary
<http://supremecourtofindia.nic.in/FileServer/2015-10-16_1444976434.pdf>.”
This ruling has been honoured in its repeated breach by the government. The
latest breach has been in the passage of an amended Finance Bill, 2017,
which would make an Aadhaar number mandatory for the filing of tax returns.

The cases before the court raise two classes of questions about the Aadhaar
programme and the Aadhaar Act, which enables it. Both classes relate to
their compatibility with the Constitution of India, in terms of its text as
well as the value commitments that the text necessarily implies. Chief
among these is a commitment to our republican form, which requires a
recognition that sovereign power vests not in any political party or
constitutional functionary but rather in us all, as citizens. At play in
the Aadhaar cases are all the corollaries of this commitment: that the
government, parliament and courts are mere custodians of political power,
that Indian citizens are not subjects, and that they are entitled to a
government that is transparent, accountable and solicitous of citizens’
rights above all else.

***The first class of questions before the court relates to matters of the
everyday life of a democratic government and how it ought to look. These
arguments posit that Aadhaar conflicts with both constitutional structure
and process. They rest on the notion that only democratic processes can
yield democratic and constitutionally defensible outcomes. They are a call
for a government that operates in good faith.*** [Emphasis added.]

The most recent impetus for concerns in this class is the passage of the
Finance Bill, 2017—a money bill—in the Lok Sabha on 30 March. Money bills
are a special species of legislation. Article 110 of the Constitution
<http://nyaaya.in/law/46/constitution-of-india/#section-110> leaves no
doubt as to their contents: a money bill “contains provisions only dealing
with” matters relating to public finances. The same provision empowers the
speaker of the Lok Sabha to make the final decision in instances where any
question as to whether a bill has the character of a money bill arises. Article
109 <http://nyaaya.in/law/46/constitution-of-india/#section-109> of the
Constitution, which lays out the procedure through which a money bill is
passed, gives the Rajya Sabha little effective say: a money bill can only
be introduced in the Lok Sabha, and unlike ordinary legislation, the Rajya
Sabha can only recommend amendments to the bill, which the Lok Sabha is
free to disregard if it chooses.

Each year, the Union’s budgets are passed this way. This year’s finance
bill included 40 amendments
<https://www.thequint.com/india/2017/03/30/finance-bill-2017-lok-sabha-rajya-amendments-arun-jaitley>,
none of which had any discernible link to public finances in the way that
Article 110 envisions. Among these was the amendment that would make
Aadhaar mandatory for filing tax returns and applying for a Permanent
Account Number (PAN) card. Almost exactly a year ago, the Aadhaar Act was
also pushed through the parliament as a money bill amid protests by the
opposition. (A challenge
<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/aadhaar-bill-as-money-bill-govt-opposes-jairam-rameshs-plea/articleshow/57125032.cms>
to
the speaker’s decision to certify the Aadhaar Bill as a money bill is
presently pending before the Supreme Court.)

At the Supreme Court, the central government will likely evade meeting
arguments from Aadhaar’s critics about the use of the money bill. It could
do so by arguing that the speaker’s determination about the nature of a
proposed legislation is beyond the pale of the court’s powers of judicial
review. As a matter of parliamentary procedure, the speaker determines
which legislations are tabled in Lok Sabha, how they’re categorised, and
the length and context of the discussion of the legislation in the house.
The position allows for a wide discretion, but it comes with the
presumption that it will be exercised responsibly. But to ensure the good
health of democracy, it is equally important that we, as citizens in whose
interest the speaker should act, subject the speaker’s decisions to careful
scrutiny and call it to account whenever necessary.

Another omission in complying with parliamentary procedure was the
government’s failure to give effective notice of the amendments to the bill
before the finance minister introduced them in the Lok Sabha. The
amendments were circulated less than 48 hours
<https://scroll.in/article/832961/finance-bill-in-one-stroke-the-indian-government-undermined-several-democratic-institutions>
before
the introduction of the bill in parliament, and had found no mention in his
budget speech on 1 February. In order to facilitate these amendments, the
speaker suspended the rule
<https://www.newslaundry.com/2017/03/23/finance-bill-2017-youve-just-been-punked>
that
requires amendments to a bill to be within its scope. As a result, members
of parliament were not given a real opportunity to present a well-prepared,
reasoned disagreement with the bill. When one party has a strong majority
in the Lok Sabha, the need to afford everyone else the opportunity to
present their best criticisms is particularly pressing. The failure to do
so undermines the parliament’s commitment to open and inclusive
decision-making processes. It further denies the majority’s own position
the opportunity of being tested and sharpened by competition with opposing
ideas.

A final issue of significance, in relation to the first class of questions
about Aadhaar, is the government’s  persistence in disregarding judicial
orders that Aadhaar cannot be made mandatory. Since January 2017, Aadhaar
cards have been made mandatory for at least 22 different schemes
<https://thewire.in/115125/aadhaar-timeline-mandatory-notifications/>. The
government has even gone as far as to revive the very measures in relation
to which these judicial orders were passed. In September 2016, the Supreme
Court had issued a stay
<http://www.livelaw.in/sc-stays-mandatory-use-aadhaar-scholarship-schemes-read-order/>
against
a measure that would link scholarships for higher education to the Aadhaar
card. One among the slew of schemes notified since January is a
notification of 16 February 2017 that makes Aadhaar mandatory for the very
same scholarships <http://egazette.nic.in/WriteReadData/2017/174186.pdf>.

The government’s single-mindedness in making Aadhaar mandatory also extends
to disregarding the terms of laws it has itself passed. Section 55 of the
Aadhaar Act
<http://nyaaya.in/law/772/aadhaar-targeted-delivery-of-financial-and-other-subsidies-benefits-and-services-act-2016/#section-55>
requires
that regulations made under the Aadhaar Act be laid before both houses of
Parliament for a period of 30 days, which may comprise more than one
session. The Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI)—the authority
responsible for issuing and authenticating Aadhaar numbers—notified five
regulations
<https://uidai.gov.in/beta/legal-framework/acts/regulations.html> concerning
enrolment, authenticating, and the security of Aadhaar in September 2016.
These regulations were placed before the parliament
<https://scroll.in/article/824801/why-the-aadhaar-regulations-introduced-in-parliament-need-more-debate>
on
the last day of the 2016 winter session. All five are yet to satisfy the
30-day requirement of Section 55.

Arguably, the provision facilitating the government’s efforts to make
Aadhaar mandatory is Regulation 12 of the Aadhaar (Enrolment and Update)
Regulations, 2016
<https://uidai.gov.in/images/regulation_1_to_5_15092016.pdf>. It provides
that any government department or agency that “requires” a potential
beneficiary to have an Aadhaar number to avail “any subsidy, benefit or
service” shall “ensure enrolment.” In doing so, the regulations, which were
framed and notified by the government in exercise of a power given to it by
the parliament under the act, appear to be exceeding their remit. Section 7
of the Aadhaar Act
<http://nyaaya.in/law/772/aadhaar-targeted-delivery-of-financial-and-other-subsidies-benefits-and-services-act-2016/#section-7>—which
allows the government to introduce schemes that require an Aadhaar
card—sets out that if an otherwise entitled beneficiary of a scheme does
not have an Aadhaar card, an alternative identity proof would suffice.

***The second class of questions that the petitions pending before the court
 have raised relates to questions of whether, and how far, the Aadhaar
programme affects our constitutional rights. These legal criticisms centre
mainly on the right to privacy and the disproportionate degree of
interference with it because of Aadhaar’s data collection, retention and
aggregation policies.*** [Emphasis added]

***Aadhaar’s capacity to serve as an unchecked instrument of mass and secret
surveillance is evident from three circumstances*** [emphasis added].
First, there is the function
creep
<https://thewire.in/63223/the-mission-creep-behind-the-uidais-centralisation-ideology/>
that
has characterised its rollout—the ever expanding list of uses that Aadhaar
numbers are being put to now includes tracking tax compliance. Second,
there is the admitted reality that the government will be able to combine
Aadhaar database
<http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-others/government-out-to-match-aadhaar-npr-data/>
with
other government databases. Finally, there is the statutory license for law
enforcement agencies
<http://www.prsindia.org/uploads/media/AADHAAR/Aadhaar%20Bill%20Issues%20for%20Consideration%20%2008.03.16.pdf>
to
access its contents. Typically, authorities would need to show good cause
before treating its citizens as suspected criminals and interfering with
their rights. Aadhaar, by enabling indiscriminate surveillance, normalises
that exception—effectively making the state’s capacity to treat its
citizens as suspects an acceptable, even routine practice. As a result, it
is susceptible to several points of criticism that are applicable to
surveillance systems not overseen by a neutral body: it does not limit the
persons under surveillance; it does not define the period or purpose of
surveillance; and it does not notify the subjects of the database of the
surveillance at all.

The special character of privacy harms is also worth noting: unlike a ban
that can be lifted or a piece of land that can be returned to its rightful
owner, once our data is collected and collated into a centralised
government database, the harm is done and  it is done irreversibly. So, the
longer we must wait for the Supreme Court’s verdict on the Aadhaar
programme, the more likely it is that it would be too late to make a
difference. Five judges of the Supreme Court—a constitution bench—had noted
the “urgency” in hearing this matter on 15 October 2015. But a bench of
three others, including the Chief Justice of India JS Khehar, denied a
request for an urgent hearing on 5 January
<http://www.financialexpress.com/india-news/aadhaar-card-data-collection-under-cloud-as-supreme-court-red-flags-privacy-concerns/498352/>,
and on 27 March, when the request was made again
<http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/aadhar-card-uid-supreme-court-a-shaky-aadhaar-4591671/>
in
the wake of amendments to the Finance Bill, 2017. The matter is next listed
for 10 April.

The Finance Bill, 2017 has introduced an additional route for the erosion
of democratic rights. The failure to properly file tax returns is a criminal
offence <http://www.incometaxindia.gov.in/tutorials/30.%20prosecution.pdf>.
So, tax-paying Indians now face a choice between obtaining an Aadhaar card
to comply or being ascribed the status of a criminal. This is not new.
Similar choices—between doing without employment
<http://egazette.nic.in/WriteReadData/2017/173479.pdf> or elementary
education <http://egazette.nic.in/WriteReadData/2017/174484.pdf> on one
hand, and obtaining an Aadhaar card on the other—have previously been
offered to Indian citizens.

In defence of the move to make Aadhaar mandatory for the filing of tax
returns, the government proffers the argument that it would reduce tax
evasion
<http://www.livemint.com/Politics/exuKa2kSNVlELiGKLS3fRM/Budget-session-live-Lok-Sabha-to-resume-discussion-on-Finan.html>.
If this is true, its position would amount to the unconscionable one of
privileging expedience in the pursuit of its interests—presumably law
enforcement in this instance—over respecting the fundamental freedoms that
democracies themselves are constructed to preserve. Every arm of the Indian
state exists at the pleasure of, and in service to Indian citizens. The
Aadhaar programme suggests that the government is losing sight of this fact.

Ujwala Uppaluri is a graduate of the National University of Juridical
Sciences and Harvard Law School. Views are purely personal.



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