SC reserves verdict on pleas against Aadhaar after marathon hearing

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

The today reserved its verdict on a batch of pleas challenging the constitutional validity of Centre's flagship scheme and its enabling 2016 law after a marathon hearing that went on for 38 days spanning four-and-half months.

"The Kesavananda Bharati case was heard for five months and this matter continued for four-and-half months. This is the second longest hearing of a case in history," told the bench, which also comprised Justices A K Sikri, A M Khanwilkar, D Y and

The Kesavananda Bharati case, which was heard by a 13-bench, by a majority of 7:6 had propounded the doctrine of 'Basic Structure and of the Constitution' had held that the amendments which may affect this structure were subject to judicial review.

At the outset today, advanced the rejoinder submissions and said was not an "affirmative action" on the part of state to serve the people.

"Is the Act an enabler or is it in the guise of an enabler? The Act is not an instrumentality to deliver services. It is only a means of identification," he said.

"We have to read the true purpose of the law and whether the law seeks to achieve that purpose. Dignity and autonomy is not preserved by section 7 of the Act," he said.

Aadhaar Act did not have a proper purpose and "a claim to a proper purpose is not proper purpose", he said, adding that "Authentication is at the heart of the Act. Failure of authentication is a ground for denial of services."

The State seeks to take away the data without the backing of a strong data protection framework, he argued.

To this, the bench said the Act like Aadhaar needed a regulator which was presently absent.

The said private players have been allowed in the Act to have the access to Aadhaar data and moreover, there was no regime of protection.

"The Act is to be struck down completely as it fails all three tests laid down in the Puttaswamy judgement (privacy). There is no legitimate state aim as the real aim is different from the purported aim. There was no law when Aadhaar was implemented and there is no proportionality," Subramanium said.

said the did not need to arrest or detain a citizen as it can simply "switch off" a person.

"Under Prevention of Money Laundering Act, Aadhaar is not just confined to banks but has gone beyond it's scope. Aadhaar is needed for mutual funds, and credit cards as well, among other things.

"Only magic words like black money, national security and terrorism are being thrown around by the State. The justification of a law for proportionality cannot be a ritualistic exercise," Datar said.

A battery of senior lawyers, including Shyam Divan, Gopal Subramanium, Kapil Sibal, P Chidambaram, Arvind Datar, K V Vishwanath, Anand Grover, Sajan Poovayya and a few others, argued on behalf of petitioners opposing the Aadhaar Scheme on various grounds.

Besides the former HC judge, the top lawyers argued for petitioners, who included Magsaysay awardee Shanta Sinha, Kalyani Sen Menon, social activists Aruna Roy, Nikhil De, Nachiket Udupa and

A key argument against the Aadhaar scheme was that it was violative of the nine-judge bench verdict that had held that the Right to Privacy is a fundamental right under the Constitution.

The Centre and the Unique Identificaiton Authority of (UIDAI), the governments of and and the RBI had argued in favour of the Aadhaar (Targeted Delivery of Financial and Other Subsidies, Benefits And Services) Act, 2016 and were represented by the Attorney General, Additional Tushar Mehta, senior advocates and and

During the arguments, the Centre had strongly defended its decision to seed Aadhaar numbers with mobile phones, telling the top court that it could have been hauled up for contempt if the verification of mobile users was not undertaken by it.

However, the court had said that the had misinterpreted its order and used it as a "tool" to make Aadhaar mandatory for mobile users.

The court had also not agreed prima facie with the government's contention that the Aadhaar law was correctly termed as a Money Bill by the as it dealt with "targeted delivery of subsidies" for which funds came from the Consolidated Fund of

Divan, who had opened the arguments on behalf of the opponents, had termed Aadhaar as "an electronic leash" and said that the could completely destroy an individual by "switching off" the 12-digit unique identifier number.

On the other hand, the Centre had said that the law was valid and allowed minimal invasion to ensure the right to life of millions of Indians by ensuring seamless delivery of subsidies, benefits and services to the poorest of poor.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, May 10 2018. 21:20 IST