[Reader-list] UID Cards

Rakesh Iyer rakesh.rnbdj at gmail.com
Sat Aug 15 18:34:25 IST 2009


Dear Taha

My small contribution to your topic of interest.

Regards

Rakesh

Link:
http://www.tehelka.com/story_main42.asp?filename=Ne220809falling_between.asp

Article:

*Falling Between The Barcodes*

*Will the National ID card really recognise and help India’s unknown
citizens? **TUSHA MITTAL** reports*


**

AN INCONSPICUOUS village on the Delhi-Haryana border, Pooth Khurd has just
been told it matters. On a hot afternoon in 2003, the entire village is
cramped inside a local government school filling forms with 16 pieces of
personal information. The Registrar General of India himself as come to
inaugurate the pilot test of India’s first national identity project. If
this project — estimated to cost of 1.5 lakh crore — goes through
successfully, it could mean every faceless Indian will have some sort of
recognition, some claim to existence. But if the ID falls into the cracks in
our delivery apparatus, this project could further isolate the faceless
millions. If the new order is imperfect, it could bar access to even those
resources the poor manage to grab because of the chaos.

The pilot project was introduced in 12 states covering about 30 lakh people
in 2003. In July 2009, the project received fresh impetus after Nandan
Nilekani, former Infosys CEO, was appointed chairman of the National
Authority for Unique Identity (NAUID) and given the task of implementing it
for 1.2 billion Indians. So will the project rely on existing demographic
data or conduct original surveys? “The strategy is evolving, but we plan to
partner with agencies working with the Public Distribution System and
NREGA,” says RL Sharma, Director of NAUID. Some reports suggest the NAUID
surveys may even override the census in the future.

By 2007, all 6,600 families of Pooth Khurd had received India’s first
Multipurpose National Identity Card (MNIC). All except 100-year-old Mukhtiar
Singh. His legs couldn’t carry him far enough to be part of the National
Population Register. “We were chosen because the government had no
complaints from our village, we are an adarsh (ideal) village,” says
Raghubhir Singh, 65, a retired army subedar. In the two years since they
received it, honour is perhaps the only thing the card has bought the
village. Most of the cards lie tucked away in dusty suitcases, inside
unopened “tear-proof, tamper proof, water proof” specially designed
envelopes.

When Raghubhir tried to use the ID card to claim his old age pension, it
wasn’t accepted. “We were excited at first, but the card seems useless now,”
he says. “No one accepts it. They always ask for the ration card, voter card
and electricity bills.”

The MNIC is a secure smart card with a 16 KB microprocessor chip containing
personal information and biometric details like finger prints. It comes with
a unique National Identification Number (NIN). The back-end management has
been outsourced to Bharat Electronics Limited. When it begins to function —
the first batch is expected by 2011 — the government says it can be used for
banking, agricultural credit, property registration, medical help, and
school admission.

“The government believes identity is an important thing, the lack of which
leads to the harassment of the poor. With this unique number, a poor man can
get a bank loan without worrying about the birth certificate and proof of
residence he may not have. A villager can migrate to Delhi without being a
lost face. It will make life easy for the poor,” says Sharma. The ID is also
being projected as a way to help welfare programmes reach intended
beneficiaries and as a basis for e-governance and easy verification. Sharma
adds that the card will contain very basic information — no sensitive
information like income — and that stringent measures will be taken to
ensure privacy of data.

But it is not yet clear who will have access to this information at the
local levels. How will it be updated? Who will be able to alter it? And
without data on income levels, how will the welfare programmes target the
poor? In the absence of a concrete game plan — there is not even an official
figure on the cost — many anxieties have mushroomed on the ground. “This
could help identify Hindus, Muslims, and Christians, and lead to communal
violence,” says social activist Aruna Roy. “We will not have 1 billion
accurate cards and cards with disinformation will make things more
difficult. Villagers will not be able to get the changes made. If this
becomes the primary form of identity, it will be impossible for them to
access anything. If the idea is to deliver better public services better, we
don’t need this card for it.”

THE PROBLEM is that beyond official statements, there is no way of gauging
what the real purpose of the project is. Much depends on what the government
intends to do with the data.

Securing our borders was certainly the initial raison d'être. A Group of
Ministers report on “Reforming National Security” in 2001 after the Kargil
War recommended the need for a systemic overhaul of the country’s security
and intelligence apparatus. It said: “Illegal migration has assumed serious
proportions. There should be compulsory registration of citizens and
non-citizens living in India. This will facilitate the preparation of a
national register of citizens. All citizens should be given a MNIC and
non-citizens should be issued identity cards of a different colour and
design.” This was how the National Identity Project was born. The
Citizenship Act of 1955 was amended to introduce these ID cards. Sources say
that in the future, anyone who provides incorrect information to the NAUID
could be prosecuted. “It was intended to wash out the aliens and
unauthorized people. But the focus appears to be shifting,” says AK Doval,
former Intelligence Bureau Chief. “Now, it is being projected as more
development oriented, lest it ruffle any feathers. People would be unwilling
to give up their right to privacy.” Despite the shift, he believes the
project will eventually make our country more secure. “With this system,
people can be located anywhere because all databases will be connected. The
chances of a fake ID being caught are much higher.”

If the pilot projects are any indication, the odds are leaning against the
UID project. In Jammu, after almost three years of implementing the ID
scheme, the Registrar General of India asked the local administration to
ensure that IDs have not been issued to dead people. Reports from
Murshidabad in West Bengal suggest that 90 percent of the rural population
have been left out of the government survey. Among them are families of
Iranian descent living in India for the last 70 years — even before
Independence.

If the MNIC is used to determine citizenship and “wash out aliens,” it would
be based on a flawed assumption — that a smart card can accurately identify
who is an Indian and solve the problem of citizenship, that a microprocessor
chip can make our country terror free. “I doubt it will make much
difference. The roots of insecurity, including state repression, are much
deeper,” says economist Jean Drèze. “The danger is that the system will be
used as a means of social control and state repression. People without the
card will be harassed and the social divide between them and the rest of
society will widen, instead of narrowing.” For Sispal Singh in Pooth Khurd,
the card is, “like a passport, a license to travel around.” Others in Pooth
Khurd seem to derive a similar sense of freedom from this card, as if it can
magically open closed spaces. Ironically, it may do the opposite,
restricting their access to their own information. Unlike ration cards and
voter ID’S, the locals will not be able to read what’s on their MNIC.

Spirited public debate on the card may address many of these concerns, but
for now, questions remain. Tilling his fields in Pooth Khurd, Parvinder
Singh has concerns of his own. “Why can’t the government spend this money
better,” he says, “by reducing the the price of dal?” •

*WRITER’S EMAIL:
* tusha at tehelka.com


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