Supreme Court extends March 31 deadline for Aadhaar linking

Krishnadas Rajagopal Updated - December 07, 2021 at 02:11 AM.

The Supreme Court on March 13 indefinitely extended the deadline for linking Aadhaar with services like mobile phones, tatkal passports and bank accounts from March 31, 2018 till the five-judge Constitution Bench led by Chief Justice of India Dipak Misra pronounces its final verdict on the validity of the Aadhaar scheme.

Remarking that it had enough of such “piecemeal” notifications and legislations issued by the government to link one service or the other, Justice Misra said it is time the court stepped in and stopped passing interim orders extending the deadline. There should be a sense of certainty that citizens would not be harmed or their services would not be curtailed even as the very Aadhaar scheme is under the apex court’s microscope.

On December 15, 2017, the Bench extended the Aadhaar linkage deadline from December 31, 2017 to March 31, 2018. The March 13 order is more or less identical to the interim order passed on December 15, 2017 except for the fact that March 31, 2018 continues to be the deadline for linking Aadhaar to subsidies, benefits and services prescribed under Section 7 of the Aadhaar Act, 2016.

Despite submissions made by senior advocate Shyam Divan and advocate Vipin Nair that the indefinite extension of the deadline should include all services, including those under Section 7, the court restricted its relaxation of the deadline to services outside Section 7.

Section 7 of the Aadhaar Act says that the Centre and State governments can insist on Aadhaar “for the purpose of establishing identity of an individual as a condition for receipt of a subsidy, benefit or service for which the expenditure is incurred from the Consolidated Fund of India”. To undergo authentication to access services under Section 7, an individual has to either produce his Aadhaar card or Aadhaar enrolment application.

Lawyers for the petitioners hint that the court may have excluded Section 7 benefits from the extension because it is statutorily protected by the Aadhaar Act itself, whereas the other linkings like PAN, mobile phones, etc., are based on other statutes or even executive notifications.

The fact that time is running out for linking Aadhaar and citizens should not be left in a state of uncertainty was highlighted by one of the judges, Justice DY Chandrachud, on the Aadhaar Constitution Bench itself. “We are dealing with the entire financial system…We cannot let this state of uncertainty prevail…We cannot tell them, like on March 27, whether the deadline is extended or not…A banker cannot be expected to seek compliance from customers within seven days,” Justice Chandrachud addressed Attorney-General KK Venugopal during a hearing on March 7.

On March 13, matters reached a peak when advocate Vrinda Grover moved the Supreme Court against the linking of tatkal passport service to Aadhaar. Senior advocate Arvind Datar, on behalf of Ms. Grover, said she was asked to come back with her Aadhaar number, which she did not possess, in case she wanted her passport.    

Justice Chandrachud pointed out the fact that a nine-judge Constitution Bench on August 24, 2017 has already recognised and upheld privacy as a fundamental right and intertwined it with basic human dignity and right to life. "This verdict has made it all the more important that the question whether Aadhaar is constitutional or not should be resolved by the five-judge Bench at the earliest," Justice Chandrachud observed. The petitioners challenging Aadhaar argue that the scheme, which requires the parting of biometric and personal details, is a coercive step and a stark violation of the ordinary citizen's fundamental right to privacy. The danger to privacy, they argued, is all the more great because India does not have a data protection regime to prevent or punish personal data leakage.

 

(The article was originally published in The Hindu)

Published on March 13, 2018 11:09