by Rhys Blakely
in Mumbai
July 15, 2009
from
TimesOnLine
Website
Millions of Indians
who live in remote rural areas
will finally have
proof of their existence thanks to biometric identity cards
It is surely the biggest
Big Brother project yet
conceived. India is to issue each of its 1.2 billion citizens,
millions of whom live in remote villages and possess no documentary
proof of existence, with cyber-age
biometric identity cards.
The Government in Delhi recently created the Unique
Identification Authority, a new state department charged with
the task of assigning every living Indian an exclusive number. It
will also be responsible for gathering and electronically storing
their personal details, at a predicted cost of at least £3 billion.
The task will be led by Nandan Nilekani, the outsourcing sage
who coined the phrase “the world is flat”, which became a
mantra for supporters of
globalization.
“It is a humongous, mind-boggling
challenge,” he told The Times. “But we have the opportunity to
give every Indian citizen, for the first time, a unique
identity. We can transform the country.”
If the cards were piled on top of each
other they would be 150 times as high as Mount Everest - 1,200
kilometers.
India’s legions of local bureaucrats currently issue at least 20
proofs of identity, including birth certificates, driving licences
and ration cards. None is accepted universally and moving from one
state to the next can easily render a citizen officially invisible -
a disastrous predicament for the millions of poor who rely on state
handouts to survive.
It is hoped that the ID scheme will close such bureaucratic black
holes while also fighting corruption. It may also be put to more
controversial ends, such as the identification of illegal immigrants
and tackling terrorism. A computer chip in each card will contain
personal data and proof of identity, such as fingerprint or iris
scans. Criminal records and credit histories may also be included.
Mr Nilekani, who left
Infosys, the outsourcing giant
that he co-founded, to take up his new job, wants the cards to be
linked to a “ubiquitous online database” accessible from anywhere.
The danger, experts say, is that as one of the world’s largest
stores of personal information, it will prove an irresistible target
for identity thieves.
“The database will be one of the
largest that ever gets built,” Guru Malladi, a partner at
Ernst & Young who was involved in an earlier pilot scheme, said.
“It will have to be impregnable.”
Mr Nilekani will also have to mastermind
a way of collecting trustworthy data. Only about 75 million people -
or less than 7 per cent of the population - are registered to pay
income tax. The Electoral Commission’s voter lists are thought to be
largely inaccurate, not least because of manipulation by corrupt
politicians.
He will also have to persuade as many as 60 government departments
to co-operate. The Government has said that the first cards will be
issued within 18 months. Analysts feel that it will take at least
four years for the project to reach “critical mass”.
Such is the scale of the project that analysts believe India will
have to develop a new electronics manufacturing base to supply
information-storing servers, computer chips and card readers.
For the time being Mr Nilekani has more mundane matters on his mind.
“I’ve only just left my previous
job,” he said. “First I have to find a new office.”
Keeping tabs around
the world
-
Compulsory national identity
cards are used in about 100 countries including Germany,
France, Belgium, Greece, Luxembourg, Portugal and Spain
-
ID cards are not used in the US,
Canada, New Zealand, Australia, the Irish Republic or Nordic
countries
-
German police can detain people
who are not carrying their ID card for up to 24 hours
-
The
Bush Administration
resisted calls for an identity card in the US after the
terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001
-
In Australia street protests in
the 1980s forced the Government to abandon its plans for a
card
-
Plastic cards are favored over
paper documents because they are harder to forge
-
Most identity cards contain the
name, sex, date of birth and a unique number for the holder
-
South Korean, Brazilian, Italian
and Malaysian ID cards contain fingerprints. Cards in some
countries contain information on any distinguishing marks of
the holder
-
Objections to card schemes have
focused on the cost and invasion of privacy
-
Supporters say that they prevent
illegal immigration and fraud
-
In the European Union some cards
can be used instead of a passport for European travel
Sources:
Privacy International;
Times database
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