*AN APPEAL TO CITIZENS*

*Eight reasons why you should oppose the UID *

* T**he National Identification Authority of India Bill approved by the
Union Cabinet on Friday has sidestepped critical privacy aspects relating to
profiling and function creep — a term used to describe the way in which
information is collected for one limited purpose but gradually gets used for
other purposes.*



Here are some reasons why you should oppose this Bill



*1.      False claims*



The Government of India and Nandan Nilekani, Chairperson UIDAI, have been
claiming that the UID scheme will enable inclusive growth by providing each
citizen with a verifiable identity, that it will facilitate delivery of
basic services, that it will plug leakages in public expenditure and that it
will speed up achievement of targets in social sector schemes.



These claims are false and unjustified. Exclusion and leakages are not
caused by the inability to prove identity – they are caused by the
deliberate manipulation of the system by those who have the power to control
the flow of benefits.



*For instance, BPL families who have valid ration cards are unable to get
their quota of foodgrains – not because the validity of the card is
disputed, but because the ration shop owners exploit them and force them to
take less than their due.  *

* *

Scholarships meant for them are denied to children from Dalit families – not
because they cannot prove they are Dalits but because teachers and school
administrators pocket the money after forcing the parents to sign on false
receipts.



Women workers in NREGA are paid less than their due  – not because they
cannot prove that they have put in the full quota of work, but because the
supervisors and paymasters believe that women do not deserve the same wage
as men, and pocket the extra money.



None of these problems will be solved by the possession of a UID number. In
fact, a confidential working paper prepared by the UIDAI states that “the
UIDAI is only in the identity business. The responsibility of tracking
beneficiaries and the governance of service delivery will continue to remain
with the respective agencies – the job of tracking distribution of food
grains among BPL families for example, will remain with the state PDS
department. The adoption of the UID will only ensure that the uniqueness and
singularity of each resident is established and authenticated, thereby
promoting equitable access to social services.”



In other words, the possession of a UID card can at best serve only as proof
of a “unique and singular” identity and does not guarantee either
citizenship or benefits. This being the case, it is strange that this scheme
is touted as a step for good governance.



* *

*2.      Violation of privacy and civil liberties*



The UID scheme violates the right to privacy. International law and India’s
domestic law have set clear standards to protect an individual’s privacy
from unlawful invasion. Under the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights (ICCPR), ratified by India, an individual’s right to
privacy is protected from arbitrary or unlawful interference by the state.
The Supreme Court has also held the right to privacy to be implicit under
article 21 of the Indian Constitution (Rajagopal v. State of Tamil Nadu,
1994 and PUCL v. Union of India, 1996) has



India has enacted a number of laws that provide some protection for privacy.
For example the Hindu Marriage Act, the Copyright Act, Juvenile Justice
(Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2000, the Indian Contract Act and the
Code of Criminal Procedure all place restrictions on the release of personal
information.



Section 33 of the draft bill empowers NIDAI to disclose personal data on an
order of a court or in case of “national security” on directions of an
officer not below the rank of joint secretary. This is a dilution of
existing provisions for protection of privacy under Supreme Court judgements
(PUCL versus Union of India) and the IT and Telegraph Acts, all three of
which state that such orders can be passed only by the Union or State Home
Secretary. There is a high likelihood of this provision being misused by
persons in power to access private details for use in ways that may pose a
risk to the life or security of the person concerned.



Personal and household data is being collected through the Census 2010 with
a view to establishing  a National Population Register. It is proposed to
make this information available to the UIDAI. This is in contravention of
Section 15 of the Census Act which categorically states that information
given for the Census is “not open to inspection nor admissible in evidence”.




Moreover, although participation in the UID scheme is supposed to be
voluntary and optional, Census respondents are being told that it is
mandatory to submit personal information for the National Population
Register. The enumerators who are collecting data for the Population
Register have been instructed to flag the details of “doubtful cases” who
will then be subject to further investigation to determine whether they are
“genuine citizens”. Enumerators are generally not able to explain the
criteria for categorising a particular individual or family as “doubtful”.



* *

*3.      “Functionality creep” and misuse of data*



The centralised database where personal data will be stored can easily be
linked with other databases, such as the Employees' State Insurance
Corporation and databases maintained by the police and intelligence
agencies.  This raises the risk of “functionality creep”, as for instance
the use of the UID database for policing and surveillance.



There is a serious concern that the biometric information collected as part
of the UID project would be used for policing purposes. The regular use of
biometric data in policing can lead to a large number of human rights
violations, especially given the possibility of errors in fingerprint
matching.



The proposed Bill does not contain any mechanisms for credible and
independent oversight of the UIDAI. This increases the risk of
‘functionality creep’ - the government may add features and additional data
to the database without informing or taking the consent of citizens and
without re-evaluating the effects on privacy in each instance.



There is no guarantee that the personal data collected and stored in a
centralised database will not be misused for purposes other than mere
confirmation of identity. The several instances of the involvement of the
state in mass carnage (as in Delhi in 1984 and Gujarat in 2002), and the
Government's support to and defence of the widespread use of  “encounter
killings”  and other extra-constitutional methods by the police and armed
forces, has already created an enabling environment for abuse of the UID
database to serve undemocratic, illegal and unethical purposes.



The Bill does not have any provisions to penalise misuse of data by
authorised persons (eg UIDAI officials), and therefore has an in-built
potential for use of personal data to identify and eliminate “maoists”,
“terrorists”, “habitual offenders”, political opponents and others who are
perceived as threats by those in power.





*4.      Inappropriate and unproven technology*



Instead of facilitating inclusion, around 150 million people are likely to
be excluded from benefits because of the UID scheme.



Millions of Indians working in agriculture, construction workers and other
manual labourers have worn-out fingers due to a lifetime of hard labour,
resulting in what is technically referred to as ‘low-quality’ fingerprints.
These are precisely the people who are currently excluded from government
records and welfare schemes.



This means an NREGA beneficiary with worn-out fingers may present his
newly-issued UID number as a conclusive proof of identity to claim payment,
but could find the application rejected. The authentication process using a
fingerprint scanner could classify the applicant’s worn-out fingers as a
so-called ‘false negative’. This is a serious concern, since NREGS has been
listed as one of the pilot schemes where the UID identification process will
be introduced - the 30 million people currently holding NREGS job cards will
be put at risk of exclusion.



This limitation is well recognised by the UIDAI in its working paper, which
states that fingerprint authentication is not foolproof, since multiple
factors (such as the degree and direction of the pressure applied while
placing the finger on the sensor, excessively greasy or dry skin, and
distortions caused by rendering a three-dimensional object into a flat
plane) can result in “noise and inconsistencies” in the captured image.
According to the paper, these distortions result in impairing the system
performance and consequently limiting the widespread use of this
technology”.



The other biometric data to be collected by the UID are iris scans and
photographs. An iris scan cannot be done on people with corneal blindness,
glaucoma or corneal scars. There are an estimated 6-8 million people in
India with corneal blindness, according to researchers at the All India
Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi. The number of people with corneal
scars (caused by infections or injuries to the eyes) will be much more. It
is reported that Cabinet Secretary K.M.Chandrasekhar has opposed the
collection of iris scans, terming it a “waste of money.”



What is more, both fingerprint scanners and iris scanners can be easily
deceived and “spoofed” - false fingerprints can be created using latex and
adhesives, and coloured contact lenses can blur and obscure iris patterns.



*5.      Database security not assured*



India does not have a robust legal framework or infrastructure for
cybersecurity and has weak capabilities in this area – several of our
high-security databases have been hacked in the recent past. The huge
amounts of personal information collected in the UID database will most
likely not be adequately protected and will be vulnerable to hackers and
identity thieves. Indeed, hacker networks have already assessed the security
levels of the proposed UID database and pronounced it easy to crack.



It is important to note that no country or organisation has successfully
deployed a database (biometric or otherwise) of the size envisioned for the
UID project, and no technical or corporate body in the world has the
experience necessary to ensure its security.



The possibility of corruption and exploitation of data is far greater in a
centralised database than when the information is dispersed across different
databases. There is also a high risk of errors in the collection of
information, recording of inaccurate data, corruption of data and
unauthorised access.



Other countries with national identification systems have tried and failed
to eliminate the risks of trading and selling of information. India, which
has no generally established data protection laws (like the U.S. Federal
Privacy Statute or the European Directive on Data Protection) is
ill-equipped to deal with such problems.



The US - arguably the most surveillance-prone society in the world - passed
a Federal law (the REAL ID Act, 2005) requiring the States to allow the
Federal Department of Homeland Security to access State databases such as
drivers' licences and motor vehicle registration. As of 2008, not a single
State has ratified this Act, and 25 States have passed legislations to
exclude themselves from its purview.



Ironically, a confidential working paper titled "Creating a Unique Identity
Number for Every Resident in India" was recently posted on the transparency
website Wikileaks. The leaked document admits that  "the UID database will
be susceptible to attacks and leaks at various levels".



If they cannot protect their own confidential documents, we cannot trust the
UIDAI to protect the data they propose to collect from us.



*6.      Unjustifiable costs*



The UID project has been launched without a feasibility study or
cost-benefit analysis. The pilot to test the technology is being rolled out
in Andhra Pradesh in September 2010, well after the drafting of the Bill.
The current costs are estimated at Rs.45,000 crores. A budget provision of
Rs. 1950/- crores has been made for the current year, of which over 200
crores has already been spent.



Nandan Nilekani claims that several thousand crores of rupees would be saved
by the scheme, through prevention of duplicate/fake IDs for claiming
benefits under schemes such as the public distribution system and the NREGS.
This claim has not been supported with data, and is not substantiated by any
studies so far.



Operationalising the UID scheme on the ground for NREGA and the public
distribution system would require placing fingerprint readers at every *
panchayat* office and every ration shop. The cost of a fingerprint reader at
this time is around USD 50. The total costs of placing fingerprint readers
in each PDS outlet and in each of India's 600,000 villages* *have* *not been
taken into account in official cost calculations.



Verification of identity by the UIDAI will be charged at Rs.10 per query.
This being the case, several private agencies may bypass the UIDAI and give
preference to other identity proofs.

 *7.      Bypassing of Parliament and democratic processes*

* *

The UID Authority has been set up with considerable powers and resources,
without any approval from Parliament or discussion in the public domain
about the necessity of such a scheme. In the absence of a Constitutional
provision or legal framework (such as that set out in the proposed Bill),
all the actions of the UIDAI are technically unconstitutional and illegal.
There is no transparency either on decisions or on expenditure, no oversight
and no mechanisms for accountability in the functioning of the UIDAI.



Nandan Nilekani has been given sweeping powers, and is now demanding the
right to select “good officers” to serve under him,  bypassing the usual
procedures for deputation of officers.



Despite the continuing debate on public platforms, and being repeatedly
questioned about the risks, costs and benefits of the UID scheme, Nilekani
and the Government of India have remained silent on the contested aspects of
the scheme.



*8       Lessons from other countries*

* *

Several countries (including the USA, the UK, Australia, China, Canada and
Germany) have tried such projects and have given these up as impractical,
unjustified and  dangerous.



One of the first acts of the new government in UK after tasking office in
June 2010, was to scrap the UID project in that country. According to
Theresa May, the UK Home Secretary, “The national identity card scheme
represents the worst of government. It is intrusive and bullying. It is
ineffective and expensive. It is an assault on individual liberty that does
not promise a great good...The government will destroy all information held
on the national identity register, effectively dismantling it. The role of
the identity commissioner, created in an effort to prevent data blunders and
leaks, will be terminated.”



It is noteworthy that the reasons cited by the UK government for rejection
of the UID scheme -  higher costs, impracticality and ungovernable breaches
of privacy and civil liberties – are all valid in the Indian case as well.
In view of this, it is fair to expect UIDAI to present a comprehensive
argument to justify why what was rejected in the UK is good enough for
India.



*It seems clear that the public pronouncements on the UID scheme being a
step towards good governance and inclusive growth are red herrings to divert
the attention of the public from the real purpose of NIDAI – to strengthen
India's e-surveillance capabilities.*



*The passage of the IT Act, 2008, was the first step to making India a
country where “Big Brother” is watching everyone, all the time – the NIDAI
Act will be another great leap forward in this direction. *





*Please do not remain silent - oppose the NIDAI Act to defend democracy and
protect human rights. *







-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist

"After a war, the silencing of arms is not enough. Peace means respecting
all rights. You can’t respect one of them and violate the others. When a
society doesn’t respect the rights of its citizens, it undermines peace and
leads it back to war.”
-- Maria Julia Hernandez


www.otherindia.org
www.binayaksen.net
www.phm-india.org
www.phmovement.org
www.ifhhro.org

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