UID: The Turf War Intensifies and So Does the Lobbying
Posted: Fri, Sep 30 2011. 3:05 PM IST
Views | Making sense of the UID controversy
On its first anniversary, Nandan Nilekani's transformational project has made it to the front pages of newspapers and prime time TV
R. Sukumar
The surprising thing about the ongoing controversy surrounding the Unique controversy surrounding the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI, which turned one on Thursday, is not that there is one, but that it has taken as long as a year for it to gather enough momentum to make it to the front pages of newspapers and prime time news on TV.
By far the most legitimate concern about the Unique ID project, even if it is one that is relevant largely to the urban middle class that doesn't gain much by being on the grid, is the one that deals with privacy and security. Without the right safeguards, including progressive legislation, it is frightening to think of what an absolute state can do with information in the UIDAI database.
While some activists have raised this issue (and while UIDAI has proffered its defence), these points and counterpoints have been drowned by other non-issues surrounding the project. More debate and discussion is needed on this.
UIDAI is headed by Nandan Nilekani , who is a lightning rod for controversy. While there is enough anecdotal evidence on the merits of maintaining a low profile in government, Nilekani's past – he was a successful tech entrepreneur in his last avatar – and his personality ensure that this isn't really an option for him. As a result, over the past year, he has, arguably, got more good press than anyone else in government. That couldn't have gone well with some ministers, politicians, and bureaucrats. Earlier this week, viewers of national TV were fortunate to see the strange sight of a serving bureaucrat, the Member, Secretary of the Planning Commission criticizing UIDAI (it is rare to get a serving bureaucrat to comment on the record on something). This was followed by an e-mail from the Member, Secretary's boss, the deputy chairman of the Planning Commission to this newspaper – it formed the basis of a story that appeared on Friday – basically saying that UIDAI was empowered to do what it was doing and that he didn't really have a problem with the way it was functioning.
Nilekani also provokes extreme reactions from left-leaning liberals who do not trust either technology or market interventions. Unfortunately for him, the UID programme is a combination of both.
The biggest challenge to the project, however, arises from the perception that UIDAI is, in some way, finance minister Pranab Mukherjee's baby. Over the past year, India's home and finance ministries have been playing a zero-sum game behind the scenes, so this makes the unique ID project suspect in the eyes of the former. Coincidentally, the Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India (part of the home ministry), is opposed to the project. The Registrar General's argument is that its National Population Registry (which is yet to start in any meaningful way) will compile the same biometric information that UIDAI is doing. The population registry can't use UIDAI's data, he says (no one knows why), so, UIDAI should use the population registry's. This is a reasonable argument (after all, it makes no sense to duplicate and effort collection biometric data), as long as the information is available when it is needed. UIDAI has been given the mandate of collecting data for 200 million people. Maybe the population registry can collect it for everyone else and the two can share information? For this to happen, however, two databases, two government departments, and maybe two ministers will have to speak the same language.
Nilekani's biggest advantage is that not many people expect him to succeed. If he does manage to, he will be feted as a hero. If he doesn't, he, and everyone else will merely write it off as another instance of a well-meaning initiative scotched by a rigid system.
II.
http://www.hindustantimes.com/StoryPage/Print/751723.aspx#
Chetan Chauhan, Hindustan Times
Email Author
New Delhi, September 30, 2011
First Published: 00:35 IST(30/9/2011)
Last Updated: 02:23 IST(30/9/2011)
UIDAI, Plan panel refuse to budge, fight still on
The slugfest between Nandan Nilekani headed Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) and the Planning Commission continues with both refusing to budge from their stated position.
Nilekani claimed his office can't report to the plan panel on daily basis saying the rules did not allow whereas the panel officials insisted that UIDAI is under its administrative control.
As per government notification, UIDAI is attached to the plan panel, which is responsible for the authority's budgetary spending. The panel had objected to UIDAI sending financial proposals for Cabinet and finance ministry approval without getting vetted from line ministry, the commission. "I have powers delegated by the prime minister. Ram Sewak Sharma (Director General, UIDAI) was appointed by panel's deputy chairman. Ganga was appointed by the finance ministry. This is the decided structure of our function," Nilekani said, adding that if the government wants it can change the rules.
The Infosys co-founder was reacting to recent plan panel note accusing UIDAI of not having proper financial monitoring and seeking the powers for the same. Nilekani had spoken with panel's deputy chairperson Montek Singh Ahluwalia, who he described as his mentor, on the note on Wednesday night. Ahluwalia on his return from his foreign visit on Monday is expected to sort out the differences.
Sudha Pillai, panel's member secretary, said: "We have raised the issue of double and excessive expenditure and had been trying to prevent any adverse comment later on." Another official said financial proposals of other offices attached with the panel such as Innovation Council headed by Sam Pitroda is examined by the commission before sending for approval of higher authorities. But, UIDAI is an exception.
The authority also made it clear that the issue of iris scan as third biometric requirement raised by the panel was a "closed chapter". It contradicted the panel's claim that iris will lead to huge costs without much benefit. Till now 10 crore people have been enrolled and 3.75 lakh Aadhaar numbers have been generated.
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