2.5 Crore Dead People's Aadhaar IDs Deactivated to Stop Fraud

The Indian government has deactivated over 2.5 crore Aadhaar numbers belonging to deceased individuals to prevent identity fraud and the misuse of welfare benefits. Union Minister Jitin Prasada confirmed this massive database cleanup, which is crucial for maintaining the integrity of the system with 134 crore live users. The move is supported by technological safeguards like biometric locking, liveness detection in face authentication, and mandatory encrypted Aadhaar Data Vaults. A new app also allows families to securely report deaths, contributing to ongoing database sanitization.

Key Points: Govt Deactivates 2.5 Crore Aadhaar IDs of Deceased

  • 2.5 crore IDs deactivated
  • Prevents identity fraud & benefit misuse
  • Part of database sanitization
  • New app for reporting deaths
  • Biometric lock & liveness detection
3 min read

Govt deactivates 2.5 crore Aadhaar IDs of deceased to avoid fraud

To prevent identity fraud, India deactivated 2.5 crore Aadhaar numbers of deceased persons. Learn about the security measures and database cleanup.

"In case of the death of a person, it is essential that his/her Aadhaar number is deactivated to prevent potential identity fraud - Ministry of Electronics & IT"

New Delhi, February 4

In a move to protect the integrity of the world's largest biometric identity system, the government has deactivated over 2.5 crore Aadhaar numbers belonging to deceased individuals.

This massive clean-up effort, aimed at maintaining an accurate database, was confirmed by the Union Minister of State for Electronics and Information Technology, Jitin Prasada, in a submission to the Lok Sabha on Wednesday.

The primary motivation for this purge is to close any loopholes that could enable the misuse of personal identities. According to the statement by the Ministry of Electronics & IT, the deactivation is vital because "In case of the death of a person, it is essential that his/her Aadhaar number is deactivated to prevent potential identity fraud," and it further helps to stop any "unauthorised usage of such Aadhaar number for availing welfare benefits."

With approximately 134 crore live Aadhaar holders in the country, maintaining the system's accuracy is a monumental task. The government highlighted that the location of death registration might differ from the address listed on an Aadhaar card, making synchronised deactivation efforts even more important.

This nationwide effort is part of a larger strategy to ensure that government subsidies and services reach only the living, intended beneficiaries.

Beyond simply removing old records, the Ministry detailed several technological safeguards currently in place to keep the system secure. For instance, the Biometric Lock/Unlock feature allows users to "lock" their data, which the statement notes is a major step in "preventing any unauthorised authentication attempts."

Additionally, new tools like face authentication now include a "liveness detection feature" to ensure a real person is present during a transaction and to prevent "spoofing" by those trying to bypass security.

To further strengthen security, the government has mandated that all entities requesting Aadhaar verification use "Aadhaar Data Vaults" to store Aadhaar numbers in a strictly encrypted format.

The Ministry also emphasised that UIDAI never shares citizens' core biometric information with any third party. For offline use, the system promotes secure QR codes and paperless e-KYC to keep data safe while remaining accessible.

The release also introduced a more user-friendly way for citizens to help keep the database up to date. A new Aadhaar app has been launched that enables families to securely share verified credentials and report deaths.

This contributes to the ongoing "database sanitization" which involves "regular de-duplication and deactivation of Aadhaar numbers belonging to deceased persons" to ensure the system remains leak-proof and reliable for all Indians.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Good move, but the process for families to report a death should be made even simpler. Not everyone is tech-savvy enough to use an app. What about rural areas? The local panchayat or municipal office should have a direct, easy link to update this.
A
Aman W
2.5 crore! That's a staggering number. It shows how much leakage was happening. Every rupee saved from fraud is a rupee that can go to a real beneficiary. Hope they continue to audit and clean the database regularly.
S
Sarah B
The biometric lock feature is something more people should know about and use. It gives you control. Security is a shared responsibility between the government and the citizen.
K
Karthik V
While the intent is good, I hope the deactivation process is accurate. There should be a very clear and quick grievance redressal mechanism in case a living person's Aadhaar is deactivated by mistake. That would be a nightmare to fix.
M
Meera T
Finally! This is basic governance. Syncing death registries with Aadhaar should have been done from the start. Better late than never. Now please do the same for PAN cards and voter IDs to have a fully clean system.

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