PIL in SC, seeks ban on using Aadhaar as poof of citizenship, domicile and date of birth
New Delhi, May 19
A Public Interest Litigation has been filed before the Supreme Court seeking directions to the Centre, states and the Election Commission of India to ensure that Aadhaar is used only as a proof of identity and not as proof of citizenship, domicile, address or date of birth. The plea has been filed by petitioner Ashwini Kumar Upadhyay.
The petition, filed under Article 32 of the Constitution, further seeks a declaration that the use of Aadhaar as proof of date of birth and residence in Form 6 for new voter registration is contrary to Section 9 of the Aadhaar Act, Section 23(4) of the Representation of the People Act, 1950, and Article 14 of the Constitution and, therefore, "void and inoperative."
According to the plea, Section 9 of the Aadhaar Act expressly states that aadhaar is not evidence of citizenship or domicile, while a UIDAI notification dated August 22, 2023, clarifies that aadhaar is proof of identity only and not proof of citizenship, address or date of birth. The petition contends that despite this legal position, Aadhaar is being widely used for school admissions, voter registration, obtaining ration cards, driving licences, property purchases and other purposes requiring proof of citizenship, residence or age.
The petitioner has alleged that infiltrators and illegal immigrants are allegedly obtaining Aadhaar cards through weak verification mechanisms and thereafter using Aadhaar as a foundational document to secure other identity documents, including voter identity cards. The plea claims this affects welfare distribution and the integrity of the electoral process.
The PIL argues that Form-6 under the Registration of Electors Rules, 1960 permits Aadhaar to be submitted as proof of date of birth and residence, which, according to the petitioner, is inconsistent with the Aadhaar Act and UIDAI circulars. The plea further relies upon various judicial pronouncements, including decisions of the Supreme Court and High Courts, to contend that Aadhaar cannot be treated as conclusive proof of age.
The petition also invokes Articles 14, 19, 21, 29, 326, 327 and 355 of the Constitution, contending that illegal infiltration impacts electoral integrity, demographic balance, welfare schemes and national security. It relies heavily on the Supreme Court judgement in Sarbananda Sonowal v. Union of India, which had described large-scale illegal migration as "external aggression and internal disturbance."
Among other reliefs, the petition seeks directions to authorities to ensure that Aadhaar is accepted only as proof of identity in the "spirit of Section 9 of the Aadhaar Act 2016 and UIDAI Notification dated August 22, 2023".
— ANI
Reader Comments
Interesting perspective. Back home in the UK, we rely on passports and birth certificates for such purposes. It seems like Aadhaar has become too convenient for everything, creating security gaps. The petition makes a good point about electoral integrity. Hope the Supreme Court takes it seriously.
Honestly, this is a sensible PIL. I've seen how Aadhaar is used everywhere - even for school admissions! But the law itself says it's not proof of citizenship. How can we have a system where the same card is used for everything while the law says it shouldn't be? 🤔 Need clarity from the courts.
The issue of weak verification is critical. If Aadhaar can be obtained easily, then using it to get voter IDs is a recipe for disaster. But I also worry about the common citizen - we use Aadhaar everywhere because other documents are hard to get. The government should either make Aadhaar more secure or stop this contradictory use. Don't understand why simple things have to be so complicated!
This is a fascinating case. In the US, we have the REAL ID system which serves a similar purpose but with stricter verification. India's Aadhaar was revolutionary but this ambiguity is problematic. The Supreme Court's ruling could have major implications for how digital identity is managed in developing countries.
I agree that Aadhaar shouldn't be used as proof of citizenship, but this is also about government making things convenient for citizens. When I had to register to vote, Aadhaar made it so much easier.
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