Right to Privacy: 9-judge Bench will decide on Aadhaar issue today

Page 1

Right to Privacy: 9-judge Bench will decide on Aadhaar issue today

A five-judge Constitution Bench headed by Chief Justice J S Khehar on Tuesday referred the question of violation of privacy by the Aadhaar identity scheme to a nine-judge Bench. The case will be heard on Wednesday.


The question of privacy has become a contentious issue as several petitioners have alleged the scheme violated the fundamental right to privacy of citizens by gathering personal information, including biometric details. The government contends that the Constitution does not recognise right to privacy as a fundamental right. Even judgments of the Supreme Court have not ruled that privacy was a fundamental right. The Bench will have to examine two specific decisions of the Supreme Court —one delivered in 1954 by an eight-judge Bench and another in 1962 by a six-judge Bench. There are some 22 petitions challenging various aspects of Aadhaar, such as linking it to one’s permanent account number (PAN), making it compulsory for filing income tax returns, opening bank accounts and claiming mid-day meals for school children. All of them allege the government has committed contempt of court by making it compulsory, while the court had earlier ruled that it should be insisted on only for basic benefits such as food and domestic fuel.

Article source by: Business Standard


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.