Centre to Supreme court : UIDAI not behind Aadhaar data leaked

Maintaining that no technology is foolproof, the Centre on Wednesday admitted before the Supreme Court that Aadhaar card holders' data was leaked.
The Union government however, asserted that the leak was not from the UIDAI's
end. A batch of petitions against the decision to link PAN with Aadhaar cards
in filing Income-Tax returns, however, questioned the move, saying it was in
complete collision due to repeated claims by the government that Aadhaar is voluntary.
Advocate Arghya Sengupta arguing for the Centre, submitted before a bench of
Justices A K Sikri and Ashok Bhushan that the leakage was by various other
government departments and state agencies. He said the leakage could have
occurred on account of lack of balancing transparency and data protection
concerns.
His response came as the bench cited reports in the newspapers on Wednesday
about leakage of Aadhaar data. The counsel said there could be some errors here
and there, but the UID remains the most sophisticated and authentic biometric
system.
"The issue was not about discriminating between people on the basis of their
having Aadhaar, but the purpose for UID was to prevent duplication and to
ensure targeted delivery of services to the identified sections," he said.
He said the government may replace PAN with Aadhaar if such a need arises.
During the hearing, the bench asked, "In a tax regime, one cannot say that he
will not pay tax. The question is, a person is ready to pay tax, whether he can
say that I will pay tax in the manner I want."
Senior advocate Shyam Divan, appearing for the petitioners, said the Centre
cannot wash its hands off by saying that UIDAI was not leaking data. "The law
says life and body is paramount and if the fingerprints of an individual are
stolen, it might end his identity," he said. The arguments will continue on Thursday.
Comments