So far, about 47 crore 85 lakh Aadhaars have been issued and the enrollment process is in full swing to meet the target. Enroll for Aadhaar is done at designated centres only and appointment for the same can be obtained online at the following link https://appointments.uidai.gov.in/easearch.aspx. However, for actual enrollment process, physical presence of the resident is a must. It is also clarified that certain agencies are falsely circulating e-mails offering online registration forAadhaar. It is stressed that UIDAI does not currently offer online enrollment.
Meanwhile, all necessary steps have been taken for introduction of the National Identification Authority of India Bill, 2013 in the winter session of Parliament likely to commence from the 1st week of the next month. The Union Cabinet has already approved the proposal submitted by the Ministry of Planning
for moving official amendments to the Bill last month.
The National Identification Authority of India Bill, 2010 was introduced in the Rajya Sabha on 3rd December. The Speaker, Lok Sabha in consultation with the
Chairman, Rajya Sabha referred the Bill to e Standing Committee on Finance. The
Standing Committee presented the Report to the Lok Sabha and laid it in Rajya Sabha on 13th December 2011.
In the meantime, the UIDAIhas been functioning under an executive order issued by the Government in January 2009, establishing UIDAI as an Attached Office of the Planning Commission. The Bill proposes to constitute a statutory authority to be called the National Identification Authority of India and lay down the powers and functions of the Authority, the framework for issuing Aadhaar numbers, defines offences and penalties and matters incidental thereto through an Act of Parliament.
PROVISIONS OF THE BILL
The National Identification Authority of India Bill, 2010, inter alia, seeks to provide-
(a) for issue of Aadhaar numbers to every resident by the Authority on providing his demographic information and biometric information to it in such manner as may be specified by regulations;
(b) for authentication of the Aadhaar number of an Aadhaar number holder in
relation to his biometric information and demographic information subject to such
conditions and on payment of such fees as may be specified by regulations;
(c) for establishment of the National Identification Authority of India consisting of a Chairperson and two part-time Members;
(d) that the Authority to exercise powers and discharge functions which, inter alia,
include-
(i) Specifying the demographic information and biometric information for
enrolment for an Aadhaar number and the processes for collection and
verification thereof; 1 service delivery organizations/Ministries. The Aadhaar letter clearly spells out that it is only a proo,fof identity and not citizenship.
b) The Committee had also, stated that pending the issuance of Aadhaar numbers
was "unethical" and "violative" of Parliament prerogatives when the bill has yet
to passed. The issuance of Aadhaar was based on the opinion of the Ministry of
Law and Justice and the opinion of the Attorney General of India which had
clearly stated that the UIDAIcan continue to function under the executive order
issued by the Government and there is nothing in the law, or otherwise, which
prevents the Authority from functioning under the executive authorization.
c) With respect to the concern of the Standing Committee on unauthorised access
and misuse of personal information, it has been stated that UIDAI recognizes that
the right to privacy must be protected and provisions have been made in the Bill
for protection of information.
d) As regards the apprehension that service/benefits might be denied to individual
who do not have Aadhaar, it has been clarified that Aadhaar number is an
enabler, with a purpose of effective delivery and benefits by establishing identity
of the resident. All schemes have some prequalification and there is no reason
why possession of Aadhaar should not be one, especially if efforts are made to
ensure availability of Aadhaar to all who want it. The actual requirement and the
use of Aadhaar will be determined by the implementing ministries/agencies.
e) Among the procedural issues .raised by the Committee are untested and
unreliable technology, global experience of identity projects, high cost, absence
of study on financial implication, duplication of effort with National Population
Register exercise and inability to in covering full or near full the marginalised
sections. The following points may be noted in this regard:
• UIDAI, in terms of technology has already generated more than 44 Crore
Aadhaar and is currently processing over 1 million Aadhaar per day with a
capacity to undertake 180 trillion biometric matches per day. This makes it
the largest Database of its kind in the world.
• Aadhaar is aimed at building a basic Identity and Verification infrastructure
for welfare and inclusive growth.
• It is important to note that the cost projections for the UIDAIproject has also
been earlier approved by the Government of India for total amount of
Rs 12,398.22 crore as compared to Rs. 150,000 Crore as reported in some
media reports some time back. The total cumulative expenditure incurred by
UIDAI,since inception ofthe Project, is Rs. 3490 Crore as on 30th Sept, 2013.
• A Cost-Benefit Analysis of Aadhaar Project conducted by the National
Institute of Public Finance and Policy (NIPFP) shows that the Internal Rate of
Return (IRR), in real terms, generated by Aadhaar would be 52.85%.
• In January 2012, it was decided with the approval of the Cabinet Committee
on UIDAI, that NPR and UIDAI enrolments should proceed simultaneously,
3 ii) Nationwide portability - the Aadhaar ID is valid throughout the
country and is thus very convenient and useful for people moving from
say rural India to urban India.
(b) On-line verification (also called as authentication) - the Aadhaar platform
allows on-line verification of a person`s identity anywhere in the country by
various means (Biometric - Fingerprint and Iris, demographic, and One Time
Password to mobile phone or email id).
Benefit to Government:
i) Can verify that a genuine beneficiary is claiming the benefit (at a
Banking Correspondent for money or at a PDSoutlet for grain); and,
ii) Reach - can provide services in every nook and corner of the country as
long as connectivity is there.
Benefit to individual:
i) Convenience - a resident can get access to services close to where they
are;
ii) Mobility - a resident can access services throughout the country; and,
iii) Empowerment - since the resident has a choice of outlets for a particular
service (go to any BCto withdraw money or any PDS outlet to withdraw
grain), the bargaining power shifts to the resident. This also reduces
corruption
(c) Electronic-Know Your Customer (e-KYC) - resident authorized provision
of Government photo ID consisting of Proof of Identity (POI) and Proof of Address
(POA) to an authorized agency
Benefit to Government:
i) Productivity - instant paperless provisioning of services has great
impact and productivity benefit for the economy;
ii) Inclusion - can provide access to services like bank accounts and
mobile connections anywhere easily; and,
iii) Audit - every KYCrequest has a unique transaction code, cannot be
repudiated, and can be easily investigated.
Benefit to resident:
i) Instant access - provides instant access to services just with his Aadhaar
number; and,
ii) Convenience - these services can offered anywhere there is
connectivity.
(d) Aadhaar as a Financial Address - an Aadhaar-linked Bank account that can
receive money just with the Aadhaar number as the address.
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