The Supreme Court on Tuesday refused to extend the timing to link Welfare Schemes to the base. In this case, the last date for linking the schemes to the base will be March 31. Let the government send money to the accounts of people taking advantage of these schemes. The petitioner says that due to the inevitability of the Aadhaan, not everyone is getting the benefits of government schemes.
adhar card |
1) Demand for extension of time in petition
- The petition sought to increase the timing of linking Welfare Schemes to the base. The bench of five judges, headed by Chief Justice Deepak Mishra, was hearing the petition.
During the hearing, Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) CEO Ajay Bhushan gave a Power Point presentation saying, "It will take millions of years to break the security of data and biometrics."
"The success rate in base system has been 88 per cent, whereas in the bank 95 per cent and in telecom, we have verified 97 per cent."
2) ... then leave 12 percent people
- Senior advocate KV Vishwanath said on behalf of the petitioner, "UIDAI CEOs are claiming that the success rate in the government system has been 88 percent, which means that 12 percent of the people are not getting the benefits of services. As many as 14 crore people are missing in the country, this is a very big figure. "
3) the benefits of getting everyone
- Attorney General K. K. Venugopal said, "No one has been left out. So far no such case has come up, in which no one can get any service benefits due to the basis."
After hearing the arguments of both parties, the Bench said that in this situation we can not order any interim relief.
Question from the court's UIDAI
1) Suspended an operator on data manipulation?
- Udayai CEO Bhushan said that the process of enrollment is on UIDAI's online software. The data is secure as soon as the operator presses the save button. It will take millions of years to break its security.
- He told the court that private enrollement agencies had been told that under the Aadhar Act, the data will be penalized for sharing.
2) Can the data be deposited?
- Bhushan said that little information is taken from the people for the base. In this we take information about photographs, fingerprints, Irish and demographic. We do not take religion, race, language, income or medical history. There is no question of monitoring any kind of citizens in this.
At the end of the hearing, the petitioner's lawyer handed over the list of 20 questions to the court. On this, the court has asked the CEO of UIDAI to answer written questions.
These challenges are given to the Aadhar scheme
- The Center has made the base necessary to take advantage of government schemes. Three separate petitions were imposed against it in the Supreme Court. Among them, legal validity of the base, data security and ways to enforce it were challenged.
- In the previous hearing, the Supreme Court had ordered that the government and its agencies do not make the basis necessary to take advantage of the schemes. Later, the court had given the exemption to the Center that the LPG subsidy, Janhana Yojna and public distribution system should ask for voluntary support cards.
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