PIL in SC Seeks Aadhaar Cap at Age 6 to Curb Infiltration, Secure Identity

A Public Interest Litigation has been filed in the Supreme Court seeking to restrict the issuance of new Aadhaar cards only to children up to the age of six years. The petition alleges the current system allows illegal infiltrators to obtain Aadhaar and subsequently secure other identity documents, posing risks to national security and electoral integrity. It calls for stringent verification for adolescents and adults and mandates clear displays that Aadhaar is not proof of citizenship. The plea argues this restructuring is necessary to protect public resources and uphold constitutional principles.

Key Points: SC PIL: Cap Aadhaar Issuance at 6 Years to Stop Infiltrators

  • Cap Aadhaar issuance at age 6
  • Frame strict adult verification rules
  • Display Aadhaar is not citizenship proof
  • Prevent welfare diversion & voter fraud
  • Address national security threats
4 min read

PIL in SC seeks cap on Aadhaar issuance at 6 years, flags infiltration concerns

A PIL in Supreme Court seeks to restrict Aadhaar issuance to children under 6, citing national security risks and misuse by illegal infiltrators.

"infiltrators are able to obtain Aadhaar... and thereafter secure other documents such as ration cards... and voter IDs - Petition"

New Delhi, April 9

A Public Interest Litigation has been filed before the Supreme Court seeking directions to restrict the issuance of Aadhaar cards only to children up to the age of six years and to frame stringent guidelines for adolescents and adults, alleging that the present system enables illegal infiltrators to obtain Aadhaar and pass off as Indian citizens.

The petition has been filed by advocate and social activist Ashwini Kumar Upadhyay through Advocate-on-Record Ashwani Kumar Dubey under Article 32 of the Constitution, raising concerns over alleged misuse of the Aadhaar enrolment system and its implications for national security, welfare distribution, and electoral integrity.

The petitioner has sought directions to the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) to issue new Aadhaar cards only to children and to frame stringent guidelines for adolescents and adults so as to prevent infiltrators from obtaining Aadhaar and masquerading as Indian citizens.

The petition further seeks installation of display boards at Common Service Centres and other locations, clarifying that Aadhaar is only proof of identity and not of citizenship, address, or date of birth. It also prays for mandatory undertakings from applicants affirming the correctness of information and awareness of penalties for false declarations, along with the display of punishments for obtaining Aadhaar and other documents through fake records.

Additionally, the petitioner has sought a declaration that sentences for obtaining fake identity, citizenship, address, or date-of-birth documents should run consecutively.

The plea contends that the Aadhaar framework, though originally designed to ensure efficient and targeted delivery of subsidies, has become vulnerable due to weak and easily manipulable verification processes.

It alleges that infiltrators are able to obtain Aadhaar under the category meant for Indian residents and thereafter secure other documents such as ration cards, domicile certificates, and voter IDs, eventually becoming indistinguishable from citizens. According to the petition, this leads to diversion of public resources, exclusion of genuine beneficiaries, and violation of constitutional principles of equality and fairness.

A central relief sought in the petition is the imposition of a ceiling of six years for Aadhaar issuance. The petitioner argues that Aadhaar should function as a foundational identity established at an early stage of life and that adults seeking Aadhaar thereafter should undergo rigorous background verification through authorities such as SDM or Tehsildar.

It is contended that such a mechanism would effectively curb misuse, as infiltrators are unlikely to enter the system as children below six years of age. The plea also asserts that since over 144 crore Aadhaar numbers have already been generated, restricting fresh issuance to children would not prejudice genuine citizens.

The petition raises several constitutional questions, including whether the Aadhaar Act has become temporally unreasonable for failing to distinguish between citizens and non-citizens, and whether the enrolment system is arbitrary due to the absence of a robust verification mechanism.

It further contends that the lack of differentiation results in the misuse of subsidies and defeats the objective of targeted welfare delivery, thereby violating Articles 14, 19, and 21 of the Constitution, along with impacting electoral integrity under Articles 326 and 327.

Highlighting concerns of illegal immigration, particularly from neighbouring countries, the petitioner submits that Aadhaar has effectively become a gateway document enabling access to multiple identity proofs.

It is argued that large-scale infiltration poses a threat to national security, demographic balance, and cultural identity, and also affects the electoral process by enabling non-citizens to enter voter rolls. Reliance has been placed on judicial precedents, including Sarbananda Sonowal v. Union of India, to submit that illegal migration constitutes external aggression and internal disturbance.

The petitioner has stated that the plea has been filed in public interest without any personal gain or private motive and that no similar petition has been filed earlier. The PIL ultimately seeks judicial intervention to restructure the Aadhaar framework in order to prevent misuse, strengthen verification mechanisms, and safeguard national interests.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
While security is important, capping it at 6 years seems extreme. What about orphans, street children, or those in remote areas who might get enrolled later? The solution should be better verification, not denying an identity document to genuine Indians who need it.
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Rohit P
Finally, someone is talking about this! In our border states, this is a genuine concern. Aadhaar has become a 'gateway document' as the petition says. Strong background checks by SDM/Tehsildar for adults is a good idea. Jai Hind!
S
Sarah B
Interesting legal argument. If over 144 crore Aadhaar are already issued, maybe the focus should shift to cleaning up that database and linking it more robustly to citizenship proofs, rather than just stopping new adult issuances. The display boards clarifying it's not proof of citizenship is a smart first step.
K
Karthik V
The petition raises valid points about welfare diversion. Our subsidies are for our poor, not for others. But implementation is key. Making the process too difficult will hurt the very people Aadhaar was meant to help. Balance is crucial.
M
Michael C
As an observer, the constitutional questions are fascinating. Can a system be challenged for being "temporally unreasonable"? The Supreme Court's view on this will set a major precedent for how identity systems evolve in a digital age.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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