Usha Ramanathan works on the jurisprudence of law, poverty and rights. She writes and speaks on issues that include the nature of law, the Bhopal Gas Disaster, mass displacement, eminent domain, civil liberties including the death penalty, beggary, criminal law, custodial institutions, the environment, and the judicial process. She has been tracking and engaging with the UID project and has written and debated extensively on the subject. In July-September 2013, she wrote a 19-part series on the UID project that was published in The Statesman, a national daily.

Her work draws heavily upon non-governmental experience in its encounters with the state; a 6 year stint with a law journal (Supreme Court Cases) as reporter from the Supreme Court; and engagement with matters of law and public policy.

She was a member of: the Expert Group on Privacy set up by the Planning Commission of India which gave in its report in October 2012; a committee (2013-14) set up in the Department of Biotechnology to review the Draft Human DNA Profiling Bill 2012; and the Committee set up by the Prime Minister's Office (2013-14) to study the socio-economic status of tribal communities which gave its report to the government in 2014.

Showing posts with label Frontline. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frontline. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

84 - INTERVIEW: USHA RAMANATHAN Threat to citizen rights - FrontLine


INTERVIEW: USHA RAMANATHAN

Threat to citizen rights

Interview with Usha Ramanathan, legal researcher.
By V. SRIDHAR

The grand Indian project for a “unified” identity regime has, since its inception, been grounded in two key propositions. The first is the notion that the targeted delivery of state-sponsored benefits and services will plug the “leakages”, which will ensure that only “genuine” beneficiaries will access state-distributed and subsidy-laden benefits. Thus, Aadhaar was visualised as the tool that would make sure that the benefit distribution system would operate efficiently. The other critical aspect of Aadhaar has been its techno-utopian foundation—that this is a magic wand to abolish poverty.

The independent legal researcher Dr Usha Ramanathan has written, campaigned and spoken extensively on various issues lying at the intersection of legal jurisprudence, civil rights and poverty. She was a member of the Expert Group on Privacy at the Planning Commission and a member of a committee (2013-14) set up by the Department of Biotechnology to review the draft Human DNA Profiling Bill, 2012. She has been a consistent critic of the philosophical, social, legal and economic foundations of the Aadhaar project.

Here, in this telephonic interview with Frontline, Usha Ramanathan argues that the Aadhaar (Targeted Delivery of Financial and Other Subsidies, Benefits and Services) Bill, 2016, abridges the rights of citizens and threatens to impose severe hardships on the poor, who are supposed to be the prime beneficiaries of the legislation. Excerpts:

What is your opinion as a legal researcher on the move to present the Bill as a money Bill—both legally and as a political manoeuvre?

Nobody seriously believed that the 2016 Bill was a money Bill. The words “Consolidated Fund of India” were slipped into a few provisions to justify introducing it as a money Bill. But, while the Bill in Clause 7 says that the government may make enrolment on the Aadhaar database a condition for getting subsidies, benefits and services, this Bill does not itself provide for any subsidies or benefits or services. What the Bill does is to make the UIDAI [Unique Identification Authority of India] a statutory entity, legalise the collection and databasing of demographic and biometric information of residents, expand the use of the UID number beyond the state to “any body corporate or person”, provide protection to officials of the UIDAI from prosecution and create some offences. The hallmark of a money Bill, which is to make money available to the executive to carry out its work, is nowhere present in the legislation.

In resolving a “dispute” about whether a Bill is a money Bill or not, the Speaker’s task is to decide whether the Bill conforms to what Article 110 of the Constitution says. A money Bill—that article is categorical—has to be “only” about the matters listed there, and this Bill is not about any of those matters at all. Maybe, the Speaker of the Lok Sabha had been advised that the Juvenile Justice Act had been passed in 1986 as a money Bill and so constituted a precedent. This, however, was proven wrong, but only after Jairam Ramesh found out otherwise and corrected Arun Jaitley in the Rajya Sabha. Now, it is either for the President to hold back on signing it into law and ask the government to remedy the mistake— maybe apologise to Parliament and restart the process of making the law. Or it may have to go to court and be judicially reviewed. That the money Bill route was taken to stifle debate is one of the tragic ironies of this project.

The Aadhaar legislation has been passed by Parliament even as a bench of the Supreme Court is considering a challenge on the grounds that it violates the right to privacy. Does the law now tilt the field against this challenge?

It is significant that just when the UID case was being heard in the Supreme Court, the Attorney General argued that privacy was not a fundamental right. He succeeded in putting under a cloud a right that has been part of our constitutional jurisprudence for over 40 years. And yet, at the same time that this argument was being made in the Supreme Court, the government was arguing in another courtroom that privacy being a fundamental right, Section 499 of the IPC [Indian Penal Code], which makes defamation a crime, should not be struck down. There the government was presenting itself as a protector of citizens’ fundamental right to privacy!

The UIDAI has been protesting that there are no privacy problems because all that the authority will do is respond to an authentication request with a “yes” or a “no”. This is not true, and the Bill reflects a part of the problem. The UIDAI collects and organises a database of demographic and biometric information, and it reserves the right to collect other data. So, the collected data have already expanded to include mobile numbers, e-mail addresses, bank accounts and other details of citizens. When the UIDAI receives the authentication requests, it has information about where the request is coming from—banks, employers, hospitals, airline companies, the Railways, shops, or even the Election Commission.

The 2016 Bill legalises “data sharing agreements”. The bureaucrats can then decide when and under what circumstances the information ought to be shared in the “national interest”. A court can direct the sharing of information, including authentication records. The government can take over from the authority “if persistently defaulted in complying with any direction given by the Central government”. The now-infamous Clause 57 permits “any body corporate or person” to “use” the Aadhaar number in pursuance of any law “or any contract to this effect”. Wherever the Bill provides for information to be taken from the UIDAI, the UIDAI has to be heard by the court or the government or an official. But the person whose data are being handed over is not only not heard, he/she is not even to be informed, either immediately or after a length of time.

There is no opt-out provision and no question of ever getting off the database. You cede control to the UIDAI once you enrol. The law endorses the one-sided control of citizen information.

But Aadhaar’s proponents claim “core” biometrics would not be disclosed under any circumstance—national security included?

The biometric history of the UID project tells its own story. There is a reason why the UIDAI is keen not to have the biometric database scrutinised, or even seen, by anyone but itself. This is not for the protection of the interests of those on the database. The willingness to share demographic and authentication data, get into data-sharing agreements and allow any person to access the UID database tells us that.

The admitted truth is that biometrics is still being researched. No one is yet sure of the value of the biometrics of such a vast and diverse population. The provision that “core biometrics”—which is everything other than the photograph—will not be given to anyone for any reason— never mind if it is a matter of national security or forensic need—is to shield the faults and fallacies, uncertainties and sure misses from scrutiny.

Why do I say this? Just go back to the time the UIDAI decided to adopt biometrics as the measure of uniqueness. That was in September 2009. What was known about it then? Very little. In January-February 2010, a notice inviting a biometrics consultant was candid:

“[The] National Institute of Standards and Technology [NIST, in the United States] has spent considerable efforts over the past 10-15 years in benchmarking the state-of-the-art extractor and matching technology for fingerprint, face, and iris biometrics on the Western population. While NIST documents the fact that the accuracy of biometric matching is extremely dependent on demographics and environmental conditions, there is a lack of a sound study that documents the accuracy achievable on Indian demographics [that is, larger percentage of rural population] and in Indian environmental conditions [extremely hot and humid climate and facilities without air-conditioning]. In fact we could not find any credible study assessing the achievable accuracy in any of the developing countries…The ‘quality’ assessment of fingerprint data is not sufficient to fully understand the achievable de-duplication accuracy.”

In December 2009, the Biometrics Standards Committee set up to report on the possibilities of achieving uniqueness during enrolment said that of the 25,000 people whom it had checked to see if the technology could deliver, 2 to 5 per cent had no biometrics that worked. So it suggested that maybe one more biometric could be added and maybe that could be the iris but that it should be tested before being adopted. And crucially, iris was included as an added biometric before tests or studies were undertaken. In the next few years, the proof of concepts on enrolment [2010-11], fingerprint authentication [March 2012] and iris authentication [September 2012] showed a system still at the stage of study and experimentation. The Parliamentary Standing Committee on Finance, which reported on the 2010 Bill, rejected it partly because of the use of “untested technology”. In 2011, the Mission Director of the UIDAI said:

“Capturing fingerprints, especially of manual labourers, is a challenge. The quality of fingerprints is bad because of the rough exterior of fingers caused by hard work, and this poses a challenge for later authentication.”

This bothered the Standing Committee, too, because it was plain that the difficulties in authentication would result in large-scale exclusion and denial since a large proportion of those needing state assistance are precisely those doing manual labour.

In 2013, the CBI [Central Bureau of Investigation] got an order from a magistrate to get the biometric database of all persons enrolled in Goa. This was in connection with the case of the rape of a child in school. The CBI said it had found a random palm print that it wanted verified. In a litigation that was appealed all the way to the Supreme Court, the UIDAI argued against the order asking it for access to its database in order to assist criminal investigations. It cited two considerations: one, privacy and two, that the way they collected and stored meant that data could not be used for forensic purposes. Initially, in May 2014, the Supreme Court directed that the biometric data of a person should not be shared without the consent of its owner. However, on August 11, 2015, the court modified this order by making an exception when directed by a court for the purpose of a criminal investigation.

On August 13, 2015, the UIDAI website was refreshed. The website now hosts a section on “UBCC and Research”. [UBCC stands for the UIDAI Biometrics Centre of Competence.] The text reads: “Biometrics features are selected to be primary mechanisms for ensuring uniqueness ... No country has undertaken to build a national registry at the scale and accuracy as UIDAI initiative. Nature and diversity of India’s working population adds another challenge to achieving uniqueness through biometric features. Like other technology fields such as telecommunication, we do not have experience like developed countries to leverage for designing UIDAI’s biometrics systems…Therefore, it is necessary to create a UIDAI Biometrics Centre of Competence that focuses on the unique challenges of UIDAI.” The “mission” of the UBCC is “to design biometrics system that enables India to achieve uniqueness in the national registry. The endeavour of designing such a system is an ongoing quest to innovate biometrics technology appropriate for the Indian conditions”.

ARE LEAKAGES REALLY PLUGGED?

At a popular level—and this appears to be its ideological underpinning—the notion that it is the most effective way to check “leakages” of benefits to citizens appears to have caught on, especially among those who are swayed by what can be termed techno-utopianism.

A study commissioned by the Andhra Pradesh Civil Supplies Department in 2015 to find out why almost one-fourth of those entitled to rations had not collected rations found fingerprint authentication failure in 290 of 790 cardholders, and Aadhaar “mismatch” in 93 instances. In the hundred days that the Jawaabdehi Yatra toured Rajasthan from December 1, 2015, the number of people reporting that they did not receive their rations or pensions because of failed fingerprint authentication or Aadhaar mismatch [where the information on the Aadhaar database and that on the public distribution system database, for instance, do not tally] was disturbingly high. There were others who had had to visit the shop four or five times before they got their rations because of fingerprint authentication problems.

Advocates of Aadhaar, including Nandan Nilekani, say the system being cashless, paperless and presence-less makes it ideal for plugging leaks.

If direct benefit transfer is introduced in place of the PDS, the last mile is still dependent on a banking correspondent or other such agent who will use an authentication system to decide whether or not or how much to hand over to the individual. The term micro-ATM is highly misleading because it is not anything like an ATM we know. It is indeed micro; but there is nothing automatic about it; in fact, it is through an agent who dispenses the monies. The risk of moneys being siphoned off, especially because of low literacy levels, particularly financial literacy, and the desperate vulnerability of the poor is being deliberately underplayed.

By making Aadhaar paperless—it is a number attached to a biometric—the project places barriers to identifying oneself when collecting rations, pensions, job cards, and so on. This may well suit the system, but it leaves people at the mercy of a technology that is still being tested, a technology with limitations for the working class that are already being demonstrated across the country. And, alongside with experimenting with this system of identification, it is setting at nought other ways people have had of identifying themselves to the system, such as with ration cards, or kisan cards, or voter IDs.The project was promoted with the claim that it would give a portable identity to migrant workers. We have not seen too many signs of portability yet, more than seven years after the project began. The large number of workers in the construction industry, for instance—and it is their biometrics that is expected to make their ID portable.

As for being presence-less, it appears Nilekani would have the government disappear behind a computer monitor. It is this absence that is already the problem. The supervision and reporting on a project such as this is largely missing. There is no one to take the problems to if and when they crop up. Technology is a useful tool. However, when it is interposed between the people and an administration, it is not necessarily empowering. But, techno-utopia has no patience for nuance or substance.

ISSUES RAISED IN COURT

What issues are raised in the cases in the Supreme Court?

The cases raise many issues of constitutional importance. One of these is the fact that a project of this nature and scale had been launched and had proceeded without a law prescribing its mandate and limits. Now there is a law, but it doesn’t address many of the concerns; in some aspects, it exacerbates the problems; these still have to be considered and adjudged by the court. There are two main streams in this project. One is biometrics. From early on, it was recognised that biometrics was untested technology, even by the UIDAI’s own admission, and that its imposition through the project was an experiment on the entire population. Two, with the “numberising” of the population and the insertion of the number in every database, citizens are exposed to tracking. Once it is in a range of databases, it makes it possible to do data mining, convergence of data, profiling, tracking and networking and trading in personal data. Use of this number, and of the UIDAI’s services, by the government and by private persons and agencies is a part of how this “ubiquity” will be achieved. That people are being asked to part with their number and personally identifiable information wherever anyone may demand it is among the insecurities generated by the project. These issues remain to be resolved by the court.

The use of companies such as L-1 Identity Solutions, Accenture and Morpho is already under challenge in the Supreme Court, especially for their proximity to foreign intelligence agencies including the CIA [Central Intelligence Agency], the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and the French government. One strange response to an RTI [Right to Information] request about how firms of such provenance could have been engaged for this project said that the authority had no means of knowing which country these companies were from; they had registered offices in India, and that is all that was on their applications! These are matters of national security before the court.

Exclusion, especially of the working class and the poor, is getting more established with experience. The court is also yet to decide on the contempt petitions filed in the pending cases which address the issue of coercion and exclusion that the project has brought with it.

The biometric, demographic and authentication data with the UIDAI is one level of privacy invasion. Seeding this number in multiple databases and the profiling and tracking that facilitates it is another. It is not only poverty and political dissent that this will target. One way to understand the implications of the ubiquity of this number is through the National Intelligence Grid [NATGRID]. Its mandate has been to give information in real time from 21 databases—and this can be expanded to include 11 security and intelligence agencies. This is not under any law, and it has been declared to be a security organisation and therefore outside the remit of the RTI Act. We often hear people say, if you have done nothing wrong, why should you care if everything about us is known? Well, it is not what we think is of interest to us that counts in such situations; it is how we are construed by those who have an interest in us. And this is not what we put out about ourselves; it is about how databases reflect us. These too are before the court.

There is a fundamental principle being argued in court: that the Constitution is not about the power of the state but about the limits of the power of the state over the people. The idea of transparency, too, is being contested. While the RTI Act aspires to make the state transparent to its people, the UID project works at making the individual not just visible, but to be profiled and tracked by the state and by private companies and persons. The matter was referred to a Constitution Bench on the question of privacy; the court is still to hear and decide this question.

COURT ORDERS FLOUTED

The database has reached a hundred crore. What now?

First, this database was built up by flouting the orders of the court. The court said time and again the UID number should not be made mandatory, and that was consistently ignored. Even the Election Commission got into the game in March 2015 until a contempt petition halted it in its tracks. This, therefore, is not a legally constituted database.

Second, when the UIDAI decided that it wanted to do its own enrolment—and not only help in the standardising of the governmental databases, as was its original mandate—it was said that all other existing government databases were full of errors but this would be the one that would be perfect. The manner of enrolment through thousands of enrollers (27,000 enrolment stations at one count), the hurry, the process which has no patience with verifying documents, the lack of monitoring of enrollers and registrars: all this explains why errors abound. In January 2012, P. Chidambaram, as Home Minister, refused to give credence to the UID database because the process was porous and the data unreliable. By end-January, there was a rapprochement between the Home Ministry and the UIDAI and they decided to share the country 50:50. That tells us something about how the project has proceeded, and the worth of its database.

Three, if the creation and maintenance of this database raises national security risks, it makes sense to dismantle it. Four, take a look at who is a resident in the 2016 Bill: it is a person who has resided in India for 182 days in the 12 months preceding the application. There was no such criterion, and no such check, in enrolments so far. The UIDAI Mission Director is reported to have said that consent, which has to be obtained from a person when being enrolled, will only apply to those who enrol after the law comes into force; the law, according to him, ratifies everything that the UIDAI has done so far. So will it also ratify a database that is not verified if the person is a “resident”?

What other aspects of the law are of concern?

The breadth of the definitions of subsidies, services and benefits covers almost the entire universe of our lives—and both private persons and companies and government can demand the number as a condition. The law allows the UIDAI to do what it will through regulations —it includes adding more biometrics, more fields of personal data, and extends way beyond. The individual has no means of asking, finding answers to or contesting what the UADAI does. When an offence, including data theft and identity fraud, is committed, the individual can do nothing. It is only the UIDAI that can take a complaint to a court. There is a clause that lets the UIDAI make regulations to “omit” or “deactivate” the number. This is what is called “civil death”.

This project began without a feasibility study. It left open questions of constitutionality and civil liberties and was based on untested technology. It was aggressively promoted, using the power and resources at the command of the state. That is why it has met with opposition from many quarters. One of the tragedies of this project pertains to how it has successfully made a villain of the recipient of state support. It has institutionalised the notion of the “undeserving” poor, which threatens to promote, instead of curtail, the extent of deprivation in the country.


Tuesday, April 5, 2016

32 - AADHAAR PROJECT-Dispelling the haze by Usha Ramanathan - The Hindu



Volume 30 - Issue 05 :: Mar. 09-22, 2013

( FrontLine)

That the lawmakers of the country have found themselves in a haze of incomprehension about the UID project, which is being promoted as a “game changer”, is deeply unsettling.


VIJAY VERMA/PTI 
United Progressive Alliance chairperson Sonia Gandhi presents an Aadhaar ATM card to a beneficiary at the launch of the Delhi Annashree Yojna in New Delhi on December 15, 2012. Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit (left) and UIDAI Chairperson Nandan Nilekani are also seen.

MANY Union Cabinet Ministers are confused about the government’s Unique Identity (UID), or Aadhaar, project. At a Cabinet meeting held on January 31, there was confusion regarding this issue, with some of them reportedly wanting to know whether the UID was a card or a number. This is an attempt to clarify some basic issues about the UID project.

Is the UID a card or a number?
The UID is a 12-digit number. It is not a card. What is sometimes mistaken for a “card” is only the intimation that the issuing authority, the Unique Identity Authority of India (UIDAI), sends to a person who has been allotted a number.

The enrolling agency collects a person’s demographic information —name, address, gender, age, and for children, details of parents/guardian—and captures the biometric information—prints of all 10 fingers, scans of both irises and the photograph of the face.

The UIDAI then has the data “de-duplicated” by cross-verifying them against its database to check whether the person is already enrolled and has been issued a number. Since a person could enrol multiple times with a changed name or address, the accuracy and usefulness of the system depend on biometrics.
The UID is, therefore, a number that is linked to a person’s fingerprints and iris scans on a database.

Do we know for sure that fingerprints and iris are unique and reliable metrics?
The truth is we do not. And this is an area of concern, especially as the UID project seeks to make these the key metrics of a person’s identity.

In February 2010, the UIDAI issued a “notice inviting applications for hiring a biometric consultant”, which contained this candid admission: “While NIST [National Institute of Standards and Technology, the United States agency that studies biometrics technology in the context of its application to public policy] documents the fact that the accuracy of biometric matching is extremely dependent on demographics and environmental conditions, there is a lack of a sound study that documents the accuracy achievable on Indian demographics (i.e., larger percentage of rural population) and in Indian environmental conditions (i.e., extremely hot and humid climates and facilities without air-conditioning). In fact we do not find any credible study assessing the achievable accuracy in any of the developing countries” 1 (emphasis added throughout).

Then, between March and June 2010, the UIDAI did a proof of concept (PoC) study of biometric enrolment. The report, uploaded in February 2011, concluded that it had “validated one hypothesis regarding biometric enrolment”—that iris enrolment was “not particularly difficult” and “dramatically improved” accuracy levels and the “accuracy levels necessary for the de-duplication of all residents of India are achievable”. But what sticks out is a paragraph in the report: “The goal of the PoC was to collect data representative of India and not necessarily to find difficult-to-use biometrics. 

Therefore, extremely remote rural areas, often with populations specialising in certain types of work (tea plantation workers, areca nut growers, etc.) were not chosen. This ensured that degradation of biometrics characteristics of such narrow groups was not over-represented in the sample data collected.” 2
In July 2010, it was reported that a 2005 paper by researchers at the Rajendra Prasad Ophthalmic Institute in Delhi estimated that there were six to eight million people in India with corneal blindness. It further identified the issue of cataract, which resulted from nutritional deficiencies and prolonged exposure to sunlight and ultraviolet rays, and corneal scars caused by injury or infection of the cornea.3 These are clearly problems essentially pertaining to the labouring masses, the aged and the disabled.

In March 2012, the UIDAI readied its report, “Role of Biometric Technology in Aadhaar Authentication”. Authentication is the process by which a person’s biometric detail is used to establish or verify his or her identity.
The report dislodges the common assumption that the print of the thumb and the index finger can be used to identify a person. It appears that for 55 per cent of those tested, these fingers did not work as their “best finger”. The report recommends a “Best Finger Detection” process. “The best finger to be used for authentication depends on the intrinsic qualities of the finger (for example, ridge formation, how worn out they are, cracked, etc.) as well as the quality of images captured during enrolment process and the authentication transaction,” it says. The fingers are, therefore, to be labelled green, yellow or red, depending on their suitability for single-finger authentication. In addition, some residents could be determined to be “not suitable for reliable fingerprint authentication”. Those younger than 15 and, more especially, persons above 60 years of age had the highest rates of rejection. This is the shaky foundation on which authentication rests.

The report does not tell us how “biometric exemptions”—that is, people who do not have reliable fingerprints or irises that can be used in enrolment—will be treated. Nor does it spell out an alternative to help secure their identity. Nor, indeed, does it speak of spoofing.

On September 30, 2011, J.T. D’Souza, managing director of SPARC Systems Limited, who works with biometrics equipment and has been following the UID project closely and critically, demonstrated to officials in the Planning Commission how, using some Fevicol and candle wax, he could spoof a fingerprint and use it to authenticate someone else. Officials of the UIDAI said they would look into it, but there is no information on what steps they have taken. 4

What about authentication using iris as a biometric? The “Iris Authentication Accuracy Report” was published in September 2012. It starts with the assumption that “the iris does not get worn out with age, or with use. In addition, iris authentication is not impacted by change in the weather.” The report attributes these assumptions to “iris technology literature”. The part of the claim that requires validation is that there is a part of the human body that neither ages nor withers nor wears out. The fact is that this is a new field of inquiry and there is very little literature on the subject.

Perhaps, the first longitudinal study of the ageing iris as a biometric is found in a Notre Dame University study conducted by two professors, Samuel Fenker and Kevin Bowyer. They state: “Using a large data set of iris images acquired over a three-year period, we have analysed cohorts of irises with images acquired over one, two and three years. We find clear and conclusive evidence that template ageing does occur in iris biometric matching. Specifically, the experimental evidence indicates that the false non-match rate increases with increasing time between acquisition of enrolment image and the image to be recognised. In our results, the false non-match rate increases by greater than 50 per cent with two years of time lapse.” The remedy, they suggest, is to have regular “re-enrolment”. At the time of writing, the implications of re-enrolment are not known.

In the process of the UID project roll-out, it has been reported from Jharkhand that authentication failed in four out of every 10 persons. This is the evidence emerging from the field.

Is UID voluntary?
While marketing the idea, the UID was projected as voluntary and was sold as providing an identity to those who have no other. Since, unlike the ration card or the voter ID, the UID does not have any intrinsic value or purpose, there was little enthusiasm for enrolling for it. This led to a change in tactics. Persons without UID are now facing the threat of denial of services. The UIDAI has been involved in the process of making UID mandatory. There is a push to make UID essential for getting rations, accessing banking services and getting gas connections and refills; for school admissions in the economically weaker section (EWS) category, registration of marriages and property transactions; and for getting caste certificates. And, if the Chief Secretary of Maharashtra were to have his way, even making an application under the Right to Information (RTI) Act would need the UID. This aggressive push seems to be based not on the usefulness of the UID to the system, but rather to drive the enrolment process.

The fact that the UID has such a low penetration even in the districts that have been selected for the roll-out of UID-linked cash transfers (in lieu of direct subsidies) must be understood in this context.

Is there a law that governs the UID project?
No. However, there is an executive order for the establishment of the UIDAI within the Planning Commission. On December 3, 2010, over two months after the project had begun to collect and process personal data, the National Identification Authority of India Bill, 2010, was introduced in Parliament and referred to the Standing Committee on Finance (SCF). The SCF gave its report in December 2011. SCF members, cutting across party lines, found the Bill severely inadequate and recommended that the UID project be taken back to the drawing board.

The SCF found it “unethical and violative of Parliament’s privileges” to proceed with the project when lawmaking was still under way. It commented adversely on the conflation of the “resident” and the “citizen”. The UID scheme, it said, had “been conceptualised with no clarity of purpose… leaving many things to be sorted out during the course of its implementation” and “is being implemented in a directionless way with a lot of confusion”. The “collection of biometric information and its linkage with personal information of individuals” without amending the Citizenship Act and Rules “appears beyond the scope of subordinate legislation, which needs to be examined in detail by Parliament”.

It was scathing about the project, which “continues to be implemented in an overbearing manner without regard to legalities and other social consequences”. On voluntariness, it said: “Although the scheme claims that obtaining Aadhaar number is voluntary, an apprehension is found to have developed in the minds of people that in future, services/benefits, including food entitlements, would be denied in case they do not have Aadhaar number.”

It cited the United Kingdom’s experience with the National ID project regarding the huge cost; the complexity; the untested, unreliable and unsafe technology; and the possibilities of risk to the safety and security of citizens.

The SCF recognised that the UID project “facilitates the UIDAI and the registrars to create database of information of people of the country. Considering the huge database size and possibility of misuse of information”, it said, “…and in the absence of data protection legislation, it would be difficult to deal with the issues like access and misuse of personal information, surveillance, profiling, linking and matching of databases and securing confidentiality of information, etc”.

On September 28, 2010, seventeen eminent persons, including Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer, Romila Thapar, Justice A.P. Shah, S.R. Sankaran, Aruna Roy, K.G. Kannabiran and Bezwada Wilson, issued a statement in which they said that before the UIDAI went any further, it was imperative to do a feasibility study and a cost benefit analysis, engage experts to study its constitutionality, put a law of privacy in place, and have an informed public debate before any major changes are introduced. In the meantime, they said, the project should be halted. The SCF echoed these concerns.

The SCF found the UID project to be “full of uncertainty in technology as the complex scheme is built upon untested, unreliable technology and several assumptions. Further, despite adverse observations by the UIDAI Biometrics Standards Committee on error rates of biometrics, the UIDAI is collecting the biometric information.”

Relying on registrars to ensure that only genuine residents are enrolled, the SCF said, “may have far-reaching consequences for national security”.
There is still no law, and the UIDAI continues to function in a legal vacuum.

What is the link between the National Population Register (NPR) and the UID?
The NPR is under the Citizenship Act and is a prelude to creating a National Citizen’s Register. The Registrar General of India is responsible for carrying out this task. It is an attempt to establish who is a citizen and who is not and to control infiltration and the entry of illegal immigrants.

The 2003 Rules authorise the collection of only 15 fields of data, and fingerprinting and scanning of irises are not among them. This means that what has been done so far in the NPR process is in violation of the law. The NPR has not itself studied biometrics but has merely gone along with the UID.

The notification that set up the UIDAI within the Planning Commission gave it the mandate to “generate and assign UID” to “residents”, to maintain the database and to work on ways in which user/implementing agencies may use the UID, for instance, for the delivery of various services. It was also to “take necessary steps to ensure collation of NPR with UID (as per approved strategy)”. The expansion of its mandate happened at a meeting of the Cabinet Committee on the UID, which was constituted after Nandan Nilekani, former chief executive officer of Infosys, was appointed the UIDAI Chairperson. 

Nilekani was extended permission initially to enrol 10 crore people, which was later increased to 20 crore. It was increased further to 50 per cent of the population after the Home Ministry in January 2012 agreed on an information-sharing agreement with the UIDAI.
The duplication in what the NPR and the UIDAI are doing is one of the unresolved areas.

UID and outsourcing.
The UID project relies on a large number of enrollers who, in turn, are dependent on “introducers” and “verifiers” to help enrol those without IDs. And these have proved to be severely compromised. The issuance of a UID number to “Kothimeer [coriander], s/o Palav, Gongura tota, Mamidikaya vuru [raw mango village, in Telugu]” with the photograph of a mobile phone was only an extreme manifestation of the deficiencies that have shown up. 5

One criticism has been that every time a problem crops up with the technology, or despite it, it is sought to be overlaid with another layer of technology, adding to the costs and introducing one more experiment to the project. So, for instance, when fingerprints seemed an inadequate metric, iris scan was added as an additional metric; a Global Positioning System (GPS) was attached to enrolment equipment after an episode in Hyderabad revealed large-scale enrolment of non-existent people. The investigations in the case are still on.

S. GOPAKUMAR 
 Scanning for Biometric Information for the Aadhaar project in progress at the Christ Nagar Senior Secondary School in Thiruvallam, Kerala, on February 16, 2012.

The NPR uses the method followed by the Census, where the enumerators have a responsibility to locate and reach persons to be enrolled.
The potential for exclusion is inherent in both processes.

Who holds the data collected?
The 2009 notification says that the UIDAI “shall own and operate UID database”. The standing committee cited the National Information Centre’s (NIC) concern that the “issues relating to privacy and security of UID data could be better handled by storing [them] in a government data centre”, indicating that it is not currently with the government but “owned” by the UIDAI.

In its Strategic Overview document (2010), the UIDAI had set out a revenue model by which it could become self-sufficient and begin to earn a reasonable profit through selling its authentication services, after which it would not be dependent on government resources. The report of the Technology Advisory Group on Unique Projects (TAG-UP, July 2011), chaired by Nilekani, promotes the idea of National Information Utilities (NIU). These will be “private companies” acting in the “public interest” and will be “profit-making” but not “profit maximising”. Data held by the government is to be handed over to these private companies, which will then use them for profit-making. The 2012-13 Budget adopted the NIU model of data management in relation to the Goods and Services Tax (GST). The UIDAI, too, seems to be moving in that direction, where it will acquire the character of an NIU.

This is deeply disturbing, for it will mean that our data will become the property of a company, which may then do data mining and use data as an asset to make money.

Why have there been concerns about the companies involved in the project?
Since the early days of the project, alarm bells have been rung about the involvement of companies such as L-1 Identity Solutions and Accenture. These companies have a close relationship with the intelligence establishment in the United States. L-1 Identity Solutions has been doing a lot of work for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). It has even had George Tenet, an ex-CIA chief, on its board. Accenture has been partnering the Department of Homeland Security in the U.S. in its Smart Borders Project. L-1 Identity Solutions has recently been bought by Safran, a French company in which the French government is a large shareholder.

In reply to an RTI query about these companies, the UIDAI said: “There are no means to verify whether the said companies/organisations are of U.S. origin or not. As per our contractual terms and conditions, only the companies/organisations who are registered can bid” (reproduced in an appendix to Mathew Thomas (ed.), UID is not yours, 2012).
These leave unanswered disturbing questions about the security and confidentiality of a population-wide database.

Has any other country got a project such as this?
No. In fact, the UIDAI prides itself that nowhere in the world is there such a project, on such a scale and on the basis of a biometric database. This, alongside the experimental stage in which biometric enrolment, de-duplication and authentication are at this point, has given rise to concerns that this is a massive experiment on the population of India.

None of the countries in the developed world has accepted biometric identity even as developing countries are encouraged to adopt it.

The George W. Bush administration considered a biometric database when it enacted the Real ID Act in 2005. But it realised the impracticalities of the project, especially in depending upon biometric stability and accuracy across the swathe of population, and across time, and so shelved it.

In Australia, an Access Card for health and welfare benefits was abandoned in 2007, two years after it was started, after protests that raised concerns about privacy, identity theft and disclosure of information.

In the U.K., when the David Cameron government jettisoned the biometric ID project, the Home Secretary explained that this was done because the government was the servant of the people and not their master, and that the project would constitute “intrusive bullying”.

What are the costs of the project?
The direct costs are expected to reach Rs.15,000 crore in this phase of the project. This does not include the cost to the enrollers, the registrars, the time and resources spent by non-governmental organisations (NGOs), administrators and the people enrolling, or the costs of authentication equipment. There is also the cost that is generated in shifting to the UID system, and the cost of failure, both to the individual and to the system. The savings are hypothetical and so far unsubstantiated.

Vijay Unni, former Registrar General of India, has asked why, when the complete Census exercise is carried out at a cost of about Rs.2,000 crore, the UID project cost, at many times that amount, is being borne without question.

Will the UID help in reducing leakage and reduce subsidies?
If de-duplication works, perhaps it will help eliminate duplicates and ghost entries in various databases. If there is a linking of databases and profiling of persons, those not entitled to subsidy may get identified.
But, as academics and activists advocating right to food have argued, given the rates of hunger and child malnourishment in India the country needs to worry about under-inclusion.

The only attempt at calculating the savings that the UID may effect can be found in a document produced for the Planning Commission by the National Institute of Public Finance and Policy (NIPFP). 6 The study, funded by the UIDAI, relies on patchy data since “the present state of knowledge does not permit precise quantification of the gains”. And “many of the gains from Aadhaar are difficult to quantify as they are intangible”.
In effect, we do not know the effect UID will have on subsidies and leakages.

What are the other anxieties that dog this project?
The convergence of databases and profiling of individuals is a serious concern, and the “seeding” of the UID number in various databases accentuates the problem.

A recent report says that Apollo Hospitals is spearheading an initiative to link the health records of patients with the Aadhaar identification system, raising questions about confidentiality of health data. Linking up the Socio-Economic and Caste Census and the voter ID to the UID will breach the protection that anonymity provides.

The rush into UID-linked cash transfer has given rise to the belief that this is only to help the UID quicken its pace of enrolment which, the UID website reveals, had slumped. And, the cost of failure has not even been considered.

That the lawmakers of the country have found themselves in a haze of incomprehension about a project that is being promoted as a “game changer” is deeply unsettling.

Usha Ramanathan works on the jurisprudence of law, poverty and rights.

END NOTES
4 D’Souza’s demonstration at the Press Club Mumbai can be viewed at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0a96L_SphR4