[《"The Honourable Supreme Court in its judgment in Aadhaar case has nowhere
directed that the mobile number which has been issued through Aadhaar eKYC
has to be disconnected. If anybody wishes to get her/his Aadhaar eKYC
replaced by the fresh KYC, s/he may request the service provider for
delinking of her/his Aadhaar by submitting fresh OVDs as per earlier DoT
Circulars on mobile KYC,” UIDAI said in a joint statement with the
department of telecommunications last week.

Meanwhile, COAI has confirmed that telcos would not be deleting Aadhaar
data unless specifically requested for. “There is no question of delinking
Aadhaar en-masse. Delinking will be done only on the customer’s request,”
said Rajan Mathews, director general, COAI.》]

https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/after-supreme-court-order-confusion-over-telecom-service-providers-deleting-aadhaar-data/story-FwTSDdiZRdBfBmpSAPNvGK.html?fbclid=IwAR2YyRwhAuFKXltD5e8HZIrGcNK8c3qXEZ3UPYkUbGrPA08nhshjxgjFa_Y

After Supreme Court order, confusion over telecom service providers
deleting Aadhaar data
The confusion over the deletion is about whether a minority judgment can be
seen as an extension of the majority judgment when the bench concurs on a
particular aspect, and whether quashing of mobile linkage with Aadhaar
automatically means deleting all Aadhaar data collected for this.

INDIA Updated: Oct 23, 2018 07:28 IST

Nakul Sridhar
Hindustan Times, New Delhi

 A Supreme Court order said Aadhaar Act’s Section 57 that allows firms to
collect data by “contract” is unconstitutional.(AFP File Photo)
There is uncertainty over whether telcos will delete all biometric data and
Aadhaar details of subscribers following the Supreme Court’s September 26
judgment.

The court’s judgment upheld the constitutional validity of the nation’s
ambitious biometrics and demographic information project, Aadhaar. Its
majority order, delivered by then Chief Justice Dipak Misra, and Justices
AK Sikri, AM Khanwilkar and Ashok Bhushan upheld the constitutional
validity of Aadhaar. It also said section 57 of the Aadhaar Act that allows
private firms to collect Aadhaar data by “contract” is unconstitutional;
private firms’ collection of Aadhaar data must be backed by law, it added.

Justice DY Chandrachud, in the only dissent judgment, said the government
and the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India must also direct all telecom
service providers to “delete the biometric data and Aadhaar details of all
subscribers within two weeks”.

The confusion over the deletion is aboutwhethera minority judgment can be
seen as an extension of the majority judgment when the bench concurs on a
particular aspect, and whether quashing of mobile linkage with Aadhaar
automatically means deleting all Aadhaar data collected for this.

There are votaries for all three outcomes.

Minority judgment is binding law: Prasanna S

“The judgment is clear. Just because it’s a minority judgment, it does not
stop being a Supreme Court judgment,” said Prasanna S, a lawyer who
hasassisted petitioners in the Aadhaar case.

You can find what is law declared also in a minority judgment, and that
principle has been set in stone in Indian jurisprudence since the 1950s,”
said Prasanna S., a lawyer who hasassisted petitioners in the Aadhaar case.

“In this case as far as telecom linking is concerned, we saw that all five
were in concurrence that it was unconstitutional. One judge says you need
to delete the data. Therefore, that direction is to be read as the view of
the court,” said Prasanna.

“Minority judgments of the highest court of the land cannot by any stretch
be treated as mere academic writing. There are several high court and
Supreme Court precedents that have treated declarations and directions of a
minority judgment to be binding law - and with good reason,” he added.

The judgment is unclear, will need clarification: Arghya Sengupta

“The judgment isn’t clear on this question. It is clear on the fact that
the circular that mandated Aadhaar linkage is unconstitutional. If that is
bad in law, then actions taken under that law are also illegal. The court
has not said whether this applies prospectively, or if there’s going to be
some time period for compliance,” said Arghya Sengupta, research director,
Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy, which provided assistance to the UIDAI in
drafting the Aadhaar Act.

The SC has scrapped the department of telecommunications circular, but
hasn’t specified what happens to actions taken under that circular, he
said. “I would say that if the SC were to order someone to delete data that
has been collected, then that would be one thing. On the other hand, to
keep data when there is no clear direction to that effect may not also be
correct. Since this aspect has not been deliberated upon, and is one that
is quite significant for public interest, a clarification must be sought
from the court,” Sengupta added.

“In the silence of the majority, you can’t say this one aspect of the
minority could plug this void. That’s a wrong way to read the judgment.”

Telcos don’t have to delete Aadhaar data: Rahul Matthan

Reading the text of the judgment closely, Rahul Matthan, a partner-lawyer
in technology and media practice at the law firm Trilegal, and author of
Privacy 3.0., said, “I don’t think telcos need to delete Aadhaar data. The
majority opinion is the operational part of the judgment. Justice
Chandrachud wrote the dissent and so what he said cannot alter the
operational part of the judgment.”

“One argument being used is that when the minority concurs with the
majority on an issue, anything additional it says on that point amplifies
the majority. The majority says Aadhaar should not be linked to mobile
numbers and because the dissent not only agrees with this but goes further
and asks for Aadhaar data to be deleted, some are arguing that telecom data
should be deleted. I disagree. A dissent cannot be a partial dissent.
Justice Chandrachud disagrees with the majority and has recorded his views
without any attempt to impose them on the majority. We have to respect that
and trust that if the majority had agreed they would have reflected his
views in the operational judgment,” Matthan said.

Matthan also highlighted some of the gaps in the judgment. “In reading down
section 57, the judgment has only said that private companies cannot use
the authentication system. Nowhere has it said that data previously
collected by them must be deleted. In fact, in para 367, they say that a
person may use his Aadhaar card voluntarily as a proof of identity. Justice
Chandrachud is the only one who speaks of deletion and even he only speaks
of it in the context of telcos. Nothing has been mentioned in the context
of banks or anything else.”

There is no positive obligation on telcos to delete: Zoheb Hosain

“There is no positive obligation on telcos to delete the Aadhaar data. If
the court has intended for the data to be deleted, then there would be
suitable directions to that effect. Usually there is something known as
judicial conference. There is a presumption that judges have read each
other’s judgment even though they may not say so explicitly. And under this
presumption, if the majority judgment has not reiterated the views of
Justice Chandrachud, then it can be presumed that directions of the
minority view cannot be construed as the law declared by the SC,” Zoheb
Hosain, a lawyer for UIDAI in the SC case, said.

Deletion only on request: Govt and Industry bodies

The Unique Identification Authority Of India (UIDAI), the department of
telecommunications and the Cellular Operators Association of India (COAI),
an industry body of mobile service bodies, have all said telcos will not
delete data unless requested by the customer.

“The Honourable Supreme Court in its judgment in Aadhaar case has nowhere
directed that the mobile number which has been issued through Aadhaar eKYC
has to be disconnected. If anybody wishes to get her/his Aadhaar eKYC
replaced by the fresh KYC, s/he may request the service provider for
delinking of her/his Aadhaar by submitting fresh OVDs as per earlier DoT
Circulars on mobile KYC,” UIDAI said in a joint statement with the
department of telecommunications last week.

Meanwhile, COAI has confirmed that telcos would not be deleting Aadhaar
data unless specifically requested for. “There is no question of delinking
Aadhaar en-masse. Delinking will be done only on the customer’s request,”
said Rajan Mathews, director general, COAI.

First Published: Oct 23, 2018 07:28 IST

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