In 2009, I became extremely concerned with the concept of Unique Identity for various reasons. Connected with many like minded highly educated people who were all concerned.
On 18th May 2010, I started this Blog to capture anything and everything I came across on the topic. This blog with its million hits is a testament to my concerns about loss of privacy and fear of the ID being misused and possible Criminal activities it could lead to.
In 2017 the Supreme Court of India gave its verdict after one of the longest hearings on any issue. I did my bit and appealed to the Supreme Court Judges too through an On Line Petition.
In 2019 the Aadhaar Legislation has been revised and passed by the two houses of the Parliament of India making it Legal. I am no Legal Eagle so my Opinion carries no weight except with people opposed to the very concept.
In 2019, this Blog now just captures on a Daily Basis list of Articles Published on anything to do with Aadhaar as obtained from Daily Google Searches and nothing more. Cannot burn the midnight candle any longer.
"In Matters of Conscience, the Law of Majority has no place"- Mahatma Gandhi
Ram Krishnaswamy
Sydney, Australia.

Aadhaar

The UIDAI has taken two successive governments in India and the entire world for a ride. It identifies nothing. It is not unique. The entire UID data has never been verified and audited. The UID cannot be used for governance, financial databases or anything. It’s use is the biggest threat to national security since independence. – Anupam Saraph 2018

When I opposed Aadhaar in 2010 , I was called a BJP stooge. In 2016 I am still opposing Aadhaar for the same reasons and I am told I am a Congress die hard. No one wants to see why I oppose Aadhaar as it is too difficult. Plus Aadhaar is FREE so why not get one ? Ram Krishnaswamy

First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.-Mahatma Gandhi

In matters of conscience, the law of the majority has no place.Mahatma Gandhi

“The invasion of privacy is of no consequence because privacy is not a fundamental right and has no meaning under Article 21. The right to privacy is not a guaranteed under the constitution, because privacy is not a fundamental right.” Article 21 of the Indian constitution refers to the right to life and liberty -Attorney General Mukul Rohatgi

“There is merit in the complaints. You are unwittingly allowing snooping, harassment and commercial exploitation. The information about an individual obtained by the UIDAI while issuing an Aadhaar card shall not be used for any other purpose, save as above, except as may be directed by a court for the purpose of criminal investigation.”-A three judge bench headed by Justice J Chelameswar said in an interim order.

Legal scholar Usha Ramanathan describes UID as an inverse of sunshine laws like the Right to Information. While the RTI makes the state transparent to the citizen, the UID does the inverse: it makes the citizen transparent to the state, she says.

Good idea gone bad
I have written earlier that UID/Aadhaar was a poorly designed, unreliable and expensive solution to the really good idea of providing national identification for over a billion Indians. My petition contends that UID in its current form violates the right to privacy of a citizen, guaranteed under Article 21 of the Constitution. This is because sensitive biometric and demographic information of citizens are with enrolment agencies, registrars and sub-registrars who have no legal liability for any misuse of this data. This petition has opened up the larger discussion on privacy rights for Indians. The current Article 21 interpretation by the Supreme Court was done decades ago, before the advent of internet and today’s technology and all the new privacy challenges that have arisen as a consequence.

Rajeev Chandrasekhar, MP Rajya Sabha

“What is Aadhaar? There is enormous confusion. That Aadhaar will identify people who are entitled for subsidy. No. Aadhaar doesn’t determine who is eligible and who isn’t,” Jairam Ramesh

But Aadhaar has been mythologised during the previous government by its creators into some technology super force that will transform governance in a miraculous manner. I even read an article recently that compared Aadhaar to some revolution and quoted a 1930s historian, Will Durant.Rajeev Chandrasekhar, Rajya Sabha MP

“I know you will say that it is not mandatory. But, it is compulsorily mandatorily voluntary,” Jairam Ramesh, Rajya Saba April 2017.

August 24, 2017: The nine-judge Constitution Bench rules that right to privacy is “intrinsic to life and liberty”and is inherently protected under the various fundamental freedoms enshrined under Part III of the Indian Constitution

"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the World; indeed it's the only thing that ever has"

“Arguing that you don’t care about the right to privacy because you have nothing to hide is no different than saying you don’t care about free speech because you have nothing to say.” -Edward Snowden

In the Supreme Court, Meenakshi Arora, one of the senior counsel in the case, compared it to living under a general, perpetual, nation-wide criminal warrant.

Had never thought of it that way, but living in the Aadhaar universe is like living in a prison. All of us are treated like criminals with barely any rights or recourse and gatekeepers have absolute power on you and your life.

Announcing the launch of the # BreakAadhaarChainscampaign, culminating with events in multiple cities on 12th Jan. This is the last opportunity to make your voice heard before the Supreme Court hearings start on 17th Jan 2018. In collaboration with @no2uidand@rozi_roti.

UIDAI's security seems to be founded on four time tested pillars of security idiocy

1) Denial

2) Issue fiats and point finger

3) Shoot messenger

4) Bury head in sand.

God Save India

Sunday, November 30, 2014

6995 - 70.43 crore Aadhaar numbers generated till Nov 15 - iGov.In

By PTI |
28th November 2014
The Aadhaar saturation level is more than 90 per cent in nine states and union territories

New Delhi, November 28: As many as 70.43 crore Aadhaar numbers have been generated by the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) as on November 15, Parliament was informed.

"A total of 70.43 crore Aadhaar have been generated in the country as on November 15," Planning Minister Rao Inderjit Singh said in a written reply to Rajya Sabha.

The Aadhaar saturation level is more than 90 per cent in nine states and union territories (UTs), between 75 per cent and 90 per cent in another eight states/UTs. In the remaining twelve states/UTs, the Aadhaar saturation level is under 50 per cent, he said.

The Minister further said the government has allocated 24 states/UTs to UIDAI for Aadhaar enrolment and the remaining 12 states/UTs to Registrar General of India (RGI) for enrolment under National Population Register (NPR) process.

Replying to a question about UIDAI starting enrolments in states other than those allocated to it, Singh said, "There is no proposal under consideration of the government, at this stage to change the allocation of states/UT."

At present, Aadhaar enrolments in the state/UTs not allocated to UIDAI are being undertaken by Registrar General of India under NPR process.

On the timeline to complete Aadhaar enrolments in the country, Singh said, "While a target of universal enrolment in the country is being pursued, it has to be noted that Aadhaar enrolment is undertaken on voluntary basis and is an ongoing process."
He also informed the House that a total outlay of Rs 13,663.22 crore has been sanctioned for Aadhaar project for the period 2009-10 to 2016-17. The government has spent Rs 5,181 crore on Aadhaar scheme as on October 31, 2014.

Meanwhile replying to another question in the house, the Minister said the Department of Telecommunication has issued instructions to telecom service providers on October 16 to collect Aadhaar number along with customer acquisition form while issuing mobile telephone connections and to store the same in their database along with other data.


- See more at: http://www.igovernment.in/news/1000945/7043-crore-aadhaar-generated-till-nov#sthash.cOBD9v4M.dpuf

6994 - PDS, RSBY seeding process to be done with Aadhaar registration - ZEE News

Last Updated: Friday, November 28, 2014 - 16:46

Raipur: The seeding of beneficiaries in Chhattisgarh for Public Distribution System and Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojna will be done during the registration for Aadhaar cards.

The details of smart card issued under Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojna (RSBY) and ration card under Public Distribution System (PDS) would be enrolled at the time of registration of Aadhaar card in camps being organised for the purpose, an official statement here said today.

While preparing Aadhaar card, the smart card and ration card related information would be linked with the Aadhaar number of the beneficiary, it said.

Chief Secretary Vivek Dhand yesterday issued directives to officers in this regard during a meeting held here to review the work of Aadhaar card and linking of other schemes with it, the release said.
 
Dhand directed officials to expedite the work and also complete the work of linking Prime Minister Jan Dhan scheme, MGNREGA, social security pension and scholarship with the Aadhaar number.

Officials informed in the meeting that Aadhaar card of more than 95 lakh people have been prepared in the state so far.
Later, Dhand directed officers to increase the number of teams involved in the task to expedite the enrolment, it said.
He said that the secretaries of the gram panchayats could be recognised as verifier for the work of Aadhaar card.

Besides, he asked to deploy literacy motivators, employment assistants, employment secretaries and patwaris, for proper functioning of camps and maximum registration for Aadhaar card, the statement said.

In the meeting, Additional Chief Secretary of Panchayat Department MK Raut informed that the work of seeding, to link Aadhaar card holding MGNREGA labourers with the scheme, should be completed through Rojgar Sahakayas (employment assistants).
PTI 



First Published: Friday, November 28, 2014 - 16:46

6993 - Monster.com ties up with CSC to launch an eKYC-based job portal - Medianama


Monster.com has tied up with CSC eGovernance Services India Ltd, a governance portal by the Department of Information and

Technology, to launch a new e-KYC based job portal for rural India.

Through this portal, Village level entrepreneurs (VLEs) can help job seekers who have an Aadhaar number upload their resume and access the services of the Common Services Centres (CSC) for jobs. The website can be accessed at csc.rozgarduniya.com.
From an initial look, the website seems to be active only for job seekers in Uttar Pradesh at the moment. It currently offers jobs for professionals, technicians, clerks, agricultural & fishery workers, craft workers and plant & machine operators among others.


The site suggests that the job portal will have a brick and mortar presence across all states and 1,26,000 CSC villages through Common Service Centres (CSCs) managed by CSC eGovernance Services India. Monster.com will be providing its technology expertise to the site.

Rozgar Duniya: Note that this isn’t the first time Monster.com has provided technology support for rural job portals in India. Earlier in 2009, it had partnered with ITC to create RozgarDuniya using the e-chaupals kiosk network.

What’s however different in the current iteration is that it is looking at village level entrepreneurs to take a more active role in fielding candidates and resumes. VLEs now can earn commissions ranging from Rs 16 to Rs 118 for various tasks such as registrations, uploading of CVs, verification of documents, ensuring that the candidate has an Aadhaar card, and getting job seekers to subscribe to receive job SMS job alerts among others.

The new website however does not provide support to Indic languages and is available only in English at the moment. We feel this might put off job seekers considering they are catering to the rural market. In comparison, The Rozgar Duniya website was in Hindi & English. It offered jobs across various categories such as textiles and weaving, teaching, mechanic and auto repair, data entry and industrial jobs such as motor binding, steel fabrication, glass blowing, khallasi and administration jobs. More on that here.



6992 - DDA razes slum near Kale Khan

Maria Akram, TNN | Nov 28, 2014, 03.11AM IST


NEW DELHI: Two days after the forest department cleared off encroachments in south Delhi, DDA swung into action at Tara Camp near Sarai Kale Khan armed with a high court order and demolished around 60 shanties on Thursday afternoon. All that now remains of the camp which has existed since 1984 is a heap of rubble. The residents, mostly rickshaw pullers and labourers, said they neither got an eviction notice nor were given a chance to gather their belongings. 

Sanoj Kumar, who works at a nearby hotel, returned from his afternoon shift and saw bulldozers parked at one end of the slum. People assumed that the machines had come to remove the old trucks and cranes dumped in the area for years. "But soon they started tearing into the rows of houses. We kept asking for some time to take out our belongings, but they just didn't stop," he said. 

Another dweller, Baldev's voter ID card showed that he had been living in the settlement for 30 years. A painter by profession, the 56-year-old was out for work when his eldest son came rushing to tell him what had happened. "Our houses are gone. We will somehow survive the chill, but how will my one-month-old granddaughter?" His granddaughter, a premature baby, is undergoing treatment at a government hospital. 

Most of the residents said they hold voter ID cards, Aadhaar cards and ration cards, but the officials did not budge. Jagdish Kumar, who had two jhuggis, has almost every government document that a Delhi resident has. "If I have a PAN card, ration card, Aadhaar card, and voter ID from this address, then how is my house illegal?" he asked. 


Officials said they could not stop the demolition as it would violate court orders. However, social activists helping the residents argued that the timing of the demolition could've been different as the bitter winter lies ahead. "The order is almost eight months old. Where will these women and children go?" asked Anil Goswami, an activist.

6991 - From March 31, pay market rate for LPG cylinders - Economic Times

ET Bureau Nov 27, 2014, 02.21PM IST


KOLKATA: Aadhaar or no Aadhaar, LPG cylinders will no more be available from dealers at subsidised rates after March 31, 2015. Moreover, holding an Aadhaar card is no more the necessary criterion for receiving subsidy on cooking gas in bank accounts.

The direct benefit transfer of LPG scheme (DBTL), which was re-introduced on November 15 across 54 districts, would now be launched nationally from January 1. The government has also decided to provide a three-month grace period till March 31, 2015 for households to receive subsidised cylinders directly from their dealers. Beyond this date, the LPG cylinders will be sold at market price.

And if the consumer enrolls for the subsidy transfer scheme by that time, the subsidy will be deposited in the bank account provided in the application. Otherwise, there will be no subsidy at all.

The period - April 1, 2015 to June 30, 2015 — has been termed as the parking period by the government with respect to this transfer scheme. If a consumer enrolls at any time during this period, he will be entitled to receive the entire subsidy at a go, based on the number of cylinders he already bought from his dealer at non-subsidised rates. If one does not enroll within these three months, no subsidies will accrue.

For enrolling under this scheme, consumers who have Aadhaar numbers will have to first link the Aadhaar number to their bank account. This can be done by submitting a certain Form 1 to the bank. Alternatively, Form 1 can also be deposited at a drop box provided at the distributor's outlet.

The next step would be to link this Aadhaar number with the LPG Consumer Number. It can be done by physically submitting Form 2 to the LPG distributor or via call centre number 1800-2333-555. One can also register at http:rasf.uiadai.gov.in or use the IVRS for cylinder booking. Both Forms can be downloaded at http:www.mylpg.in and the government feels this is the preferred means of enrolling under the scheme.

"Holding a physical Aadhaar card is not necessary for enrolling under this scheme. There are individuals who have not received the physical Aadhaar card. For them, a copy of the e-Aadhaar card downloaded from the UIDAI website is sufficient," said YK Gupta, executive director at Indian Oil Corporation.

In case a consumer does not have the Aadhaar number, he will have to provide his 17digit LPG ID to the bank using Form 3. The 17digit ID would be available on the cash-memo of LPG cylinders that have been delivered in the past. One can also log on to his respective oil marketing company's website, punch the consumer ID to know the 17-digit LPG ID.

However, not all banks are accepting these forms at the moment. "We are in the process of bringing all banks under our network. However, at present, only nine PSU banks would be accepting the form," Gupta said.


Alternatively, the consumer can fill up Form 4 and submit his bank details to the LPG distributor. They can also provide their bank details through the ministry's website, http:www.mylpg.in. Both Forms 3 and 4 can be downloaded from this website or can be collected from the LPG dealer. "After one enrolls under the scheme and books his first cylinder, he will receive an advance of Rs 568 from the government — an amount that will help him buy the first cylinder at the market rate. After the cylinder is delivered, the subsidy portion of the cylinder will be deposited at the bank within two to three days," Gupta said.

6990 - Aadhaar enrolment reaches 90% in four northern states - Business Standard

Out of the total population of 60.9 million in the region, the UIDAI has enrolled 56.4 million people, which is 92.6%

Vijay C Roy  |  Chandigarh  November 27, 2014 Last Updated at 20:34 IST



Out of the total population of 60.9 million in the region, the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) has enrolled 56.4 million people, which is 92.6 per cent. Leading the way if Chandigarh with 101.6 per cent enrolment, followed by Himachal Pradesh (97.9 per cent), Punjab (97.0 per cent) and Haryana (85.9 per cent). The population figure in the above data is according to the census 2011 whereas the Aadhaar enrolment figure is the latest made available by the UIDAI. The number of people who have enrolled in Chandigarh is more than the population of the city in 2011.

The matter assumes significance as the prime minister's office (PMO) has identified various schemes, such as MGNREGA, scholarships, old age pension and public distribution system, to be linked with Aadhaar. Also, the target has been set by PMO for 100 per cent Aadhaar seeding with banks in the schemes by the end of December 2014.

The data was shared by UIDAI officials during the recently held State Level Bankers Committee meet in Chandigarh. Aadhaar generation in the region is 85.4 per cent, which means 52 million people have been issued Aadhaar number. In Himchal Pradesh, the Aadhaar generation is 95 per cent, followed by Chandigarh (91.1 per cent), Punjab (89.3 per cent) and Haryana (78.4 per cent).

With this, over 52 million Aadhaar number holders of the region can now avail of many services with their Aadhaars, as the Reserve Bank of India has recognised it as valid KYC (know your customer) to open a bank account. They can also obtain a SIM card, a PAN card and an LPG connection, among others.

Banking officials said in the recent months, the Centre has provided fresh impetus to UIDAI by linking Aadhaar to various schemes and initiatives, including the Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY), MGNREGA, Pensions, post-matric scholarships.

6989 - UIDAI generates 70.43 crore Aadhaar numbers till November 15 - Economic Times

PTI Nov 27, 2014, 04.53PM IST

NEW DELHI: As many as 70.43 crore Aadhaar numbers have been generated by the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) as on November 15, Parliament was informed today.
"A total of 70.43 crore Aadhaar have been generated in the country as on November 15," Planning Minister Rao Inderjit Singh said in a written reply to Rajya Sabha.

The Aadhaar saturation level is more than 90 per cent in nine states and union territories (UTs), between 75 per cent and 90 per cent in another eight states/UTs. In the remaining twelve states/UTs, the Aadhaar saturation level is under 50 per cent, he said.
The Minister further said the government has allocated 24 states/UTs to UIDAI for Aadhaar enrolment and the remaining 12 states/UTs to Registrar General of India ( RGI) for enrolment under National Population Register (NPR) process.

Replying to a question about UIDAI starting enrolments in states other than those allocated to it, Singh said, "There is no proposal under consideration of the government, at this stage to change the allocation of states/UT."

At present, Aadhaar enrolments in the state/UTs not allocated to UIDAI are being undertaken by Registrar General of India under NPR process.

On the timeline to complete Aadhaar enrolments in the country, Singh said, "While a target of universal enrolment in the country is being pursued, it has to be noted that Aadhaar enrolment is undertaken on voluntary basis and is an ongoing process."

He also informed the House that a total outlay of Rs 13,663.22 crore has been sanctioned for Aadhaar project for the period 2009-10 to 2016-17. The government has spent Rs 5,181 crore on Aadhaar scheme as on October 31, 2014.


Meanwhile replying to another question in the house, the Minister said the Department of Telecommunication has issued instructions to telecom service providers on October 16 to collect Aadhaar number along with customer acquisition form while issuing mobile telephone connections and to store the same in their database along with other data.

6988 - Public sector banks top Jan Dhan score at halftime AJ VINAYAK/LN REVATHY - Hindu Business Line



State Bank leads with 1.44 crore accounts
MANGALURU/COIMBATORE, NOVEMBER 25:  


With 70,000 camps all over the country on the first day of its launch on August 28, the Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY) was successful in opening 1.84 crore accounts.

The scheme, announced on August 15 by Prime Minister Narendra Modihas a scheduled completion date of January 26.

By September 25, the number had crossed 5 crore accounts. (Of them, 2.95 crore accounts were reported from rural areas.) The next 1 crore accounts were added by September 15, and 7 crore accounts were opened by November 5.

So at halftime now, the scores differ for different banks on different parameters.

Public sector banks (PSBs) are racing ahead in the opening of accounts under the scheme.

Of the 7.91 crore total accounts opened till November 22, the PSBs accounted for 6.36 crore. This was followed by regional rural banks sponsored by PSBs) at 1.34 crore accounts. Private sector banks have so far opened 21.33 lakh accounts.

Among public sector banks, State Bank of India (SBI) led the table with 1.44 crore accounts. Bank of Baroda, Canara Bank and Punjab National Bank (PNB) opened 42.57 lakh, 41.92 lakh and 40.8 lakh accounts, respectively. The latest entry in the banking space, the Bharatiya Mahila Bank opened 45,000 accounts.

Bankers in rural areas are leading the race by opening 4.7 crore accounts till November 22 as against their counterparts in urban areas with 3.21 crore accounts.

As of November 22, the accounts had a balance of ₹6,224 crore. While PNB had about ₹775 crore, SBI had about ₹135 crore and Corporation Bank managed ₹216 crore.

However, nearly 75 per cent of the accounts opened under the scheme have a zero balance. Of the 7.91 crore accounts, 5.94 crore had zero balance.

Aadhaar
Seeding or linking of Aadhaar numbers with the bank accounts will play an important role in making PMJDY operational, as the Government intends to route payment of subsidies under various government schemes through Aadhaar-enabled accounts in the future.

Seeding was the highest in Telangana with 71.75 per cent as on November 19.

The Aadhaar seeding was below 60 per cent in Goa and Puducherry, and below 50 per cent in Kerala. These States are reported to have achieved 100 per cent coverage in opening of accounts.

RuPay cards
One of the main components of the scheme is the RuPay debit cards to all the account holders, including an accident cover of ₹1 lakh. Nearly 60 per cent of those enrolled have been given RuPay cards.
PSBs issued cards to 71 per cent of accounts whereas RRBs could issue cards to 14 per cent of account holders. Private sector banks issued RuPay cards to 51 per cent account holders.

Private banks fare poorly
When asked about the poor participation by private sector banks in various schemes launched by the government, an employee of a bank in a rural area said PSBs and RRBs are like buses of state road transport corporations.

They have to operate buses even if there is no business in a particular route. However, private sector banks are like luxury buses owned by private operators that operate only on profitable routes.

(This article was published on November 25, 2014)

6987 - Nandan Nilekani’s No. 2 man Ram Sewak Sharma now spearheading policies for Digital India initiative - Economic Times

Pankaj Mishra & Jayadevan PK, ET Bureau Nov 26, 2014, 02.38PM IST


BENGALURU: He can chalk out eloquent policies to make better use of technology in governance, reel programming jargon like a techie or even hunker down and code through the night. 

Among bureaucrats in Delhi, Ram Sewak Sharma is an exception. "He can write code as well as the best software folks I know," said Infosys cofounder Nandan Nilekani, who led the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) where Sharma was his top hand. At UIDAI, Sharma was employee number two and Nilekani was the first employee. The two men worked side by side for nearly four years to bring Aadhaar, the world's largest biometric database, to life in record time.

As the secretary of information technology, Sharma now spearheads key policies that are part of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Digital India initiative."Coding is my hobby," said Sharma, who has been programming since the mideighties when he got his first computer.
Nilekani, who not so long ago at Infosys had some of the country's top IT leaders reporting to him, calls Sharma "extremely dynamic," and "a quick decision-maker willing to take risks." Indeed, unlike many top bureaucrats who take a mid-career break to learn public policy in the United States, Sharma studied Masters in Computer Science at UC Riverside with classmates half his age in 2000. At the time, Sharma was 45 years old.

"All my kids were studying, and I was also studying," jokes Sharma, who has four children.

While at Aadhaar, Nilekani dealt with the external world and Sharma toiled within the organisation that was created to give a unique identification number to over a billion people.

Sharma even wrote the first version of a client software that was used to enrol people into the Aadhaar database.
"He was truly the Aadhaar of Aadhaar," said Nilekani.

There isn't much time to code these days. But his coding prowess and understanding of systems help him implement solutions better. A few months ago, the IT department rolled out a biometric attendance management system which caught much attention from the press.

The Aadhaar-based solution, built by a team of three working under Sharma, can monitor and report staff attendance in real time.

Last week, the BJP government said that it will roll out the attendance system across all central government offices in the country by the next Republic Day.

"In a world where officers keep moving on, he hangs in and builds on projects," said Srikanth Nadhamuni, the chief executive officer of Khosla Labs.

Nadhamuni, who has worked on the UIDAI project, says that Sharma is a combination of somebody who "understands real world problems and can deliver a solution at India scale".
The big plan now is to bring Narendra Modi government's Digital India vision to fruition.

"It's a government-wide initiative to re-engineer business processes," said Sharma, who has a reputation of turning up promptly at 9:00 am for work.

The focus is on better citizen service delivery using technology and the department of information technology is the co-ordinating agency for the Digital India plan.

"He spends time and effort on understanding technology and not just managing it," said Lalitesh Katragadda, former country head of products at Google India. "One thing that makes Google successful is that the leadership understands technology. And that's the culture Sharmaji is bringing to the game," he said.
The career bureaucrat did not grow up wanting to be a government official. Inspired by renowned physicist Meghnad Saha's career, young Sharma wanted to become a scientist.
He was born in a family of well-to-do farmers, close to Faridabad in a backward village where there was no primary school until a few years ago.

"I had to cycle 10 kilometres everyday to school," recalls Sharmawho went on to study at the Allahabad University where Saha was once a professor. "That changed my life.If I was in Faridabad, things would have been different," said Sharma, who grew up with three brothers and four sisters.

Worried that he would marry someone outside his caste, his family didn't allow him to go abroad for studies and Sharma ended up at the IIT Kanpur to do his masters in Mathematics in 1976.

The next year, he decided to join the civil services and has worked in various capacities in the government.
From his days at IIT and early career as a bureaucrat in what has now come to be known as the licence Raj, much has changed.

India has over 900 million mobile phone connections, millions of Internet users, ecommerce is reaching smaller towns and investors are betting big on the country's growing startups.
The new government is now talking about a massive plan to make use of technology to deliver citizen services.
One of the first steps to make the Digital India initiative successful is to develop policy frameworks and Sharma is already at work on these.


The government has readied a policy that encourages the use of open source software, Sharma told ET earlier this month.

The policy will also seek to create a GitHub-like repository of software that can be collaboratively developed. "It will help us reduce duplication of efforts and save us time and effort," said Sharma.

Another core element of the Digital India initiative is to digitise millions of government records pertaining to the citizen and host it on the cloud.

Once implemented, departments can access people's records without making them run around for physical copies. "Maybe we can provide you with a digital locker where you can keep all your certificates," he said.

Sharad Sharma who cofounded software product think thank iSpirt and works closely with the government on several issues, said, "He is able to combine government expertise with pro-bono private-sector expertise in a way that hasn't been done before."

"His lasting legacy would be a long overdue revamp of the eGov architecture to yield citizen-friendly applications," he added.
Now at the fag end of his career, Ram Sewak Sharma wants to see some of the government's ambitious initiatives through.
"More process reforms, digitisation of citizen documents and financial inclusion championed by the government will be transformational," said Sharma, who is a trusted hand of Union Minister for Information Technology minister Ravi Shankar Prasad. "They seem to share such a great relationship which makes things work," said Katragadda, who has met the duo a few times.

6086 - Modified DBT for LPG to be launched in 23 Odisha dists on Jan 1, 2015 - Odisha Sun Times

Reported by Santosh Jagdev
Bhubaneswar, Nov 26:

After a comprehensive review, the Union government has planned to re-launch the direct benefit transfer (DBT) scheme for subsidized LPG cylinders with suitable modifications in the rest 23 districts of Odisha on January 1, 2015, KK Sharma, General Manager of Indian Oil Corporation Limited (IOCL) for the Odisha region said here today.

Briefing newsmen here, Sharma said with the modifications in DBT scheme, consumers who do not have Aadhaar card now, can have the subsidy credited directly to their bank account without producing Aadhaar. However, as and when they get the Aadhaar card, they may have to shift to Aadhaar based cash transfer, he said.

Nearly 4 lakh consumers having Aadhaar number have already been covered under the pilot project launched in nine districts of the state on June 1, 2013. With the re-launch of the scheme with major modifications, the number of consumers covered is now set to total 24 lakh, the IOCL GM said.
The modified DBT scheme has already been launched in 54 districts of the country on November 15 in the first phase and would be extended to the rest of the country on January 1 next year, he added.

Sharma clarified that consumers, who have joined the DBT scheme and are receiving cash subsidy in their bank accounts, do not need to do anything further. To confirm this, they should check their cash transfer complaint (CTC) status on www.MyLPG.in, he added.

Consumers, who are not on CTC, will get a three-month grace period during which they will receive the cylinders at subsidized rates. After the grace period, they will get an additional period of three months as parking period.

During the parking period, they will have to buy cylinders at the market rate. If the consumer joins the scheme within the parking period, the subsidy as per entitlement and consumption during parking period will be transferred to his bank account.
There are two options to join the scheme. LPG consumers who have Aadhaar number must provide it to LPG distributor using Fform 2 and to bank using Form 1. But if the LPG consumers do not have Aadhaar number, one can give bank details to LPG distributor in Form 4 or the 17-digit LPG ID to the bank using Form 3, Sharma said.


When one joins the scheme, a permanent advance of Rs 568 is paid iton the bank account of consumers as soon as he/she makes the first booking for a cylinder prior to the delivery. This advance ensures that LPG consumers have extra cash to pay for the first LPG cylinder at market price. The permanent advance shall be notified to the consumers now joining the scheme separately. This apart, a consumer can withdraw subsidy money from the bank ATMs whenever he requires.

6085 - Inter-state council, planning and monitoring division & UIDAI to merge to replace plan panel - Economic Times

Yogima Sharma, ET Bureau Nov 26, 2014, 07.04AM IST

NEW DELHI: The new institution that will replace the Planning Commission is likely to be a combination of three key divisions, each headed by a secretary and placed under the umbrella of a more powerful planning ministry. These divisions include the inter-state council, planning and monitoring division and Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), which, along with direct benefit transfer or DBT will have a critical role in implementing Prime Minister Narendra Modi's vision.

Senior government officials told ET that the government is considering consolidation of these divisions under the ministry of planning, presently headed by a minister of state with independent charge Rao Inderjit Singh, and a decision to this effect could be taken before the end of this year.

"The PM is of the view that the states should play a greater role in planning and hence the proposal is to move the inter-state council from home ministry to Yojana Bhawan to oversee development works of the state," an official said.

Besides, the new government is keen on eventually linking Aadhaar with DBT platform, which will require greater synergy between the two, the official said, adding, "Hence, it has been decided to shift out DBT from finance ministry to the new institution." According to the official, who did not wish to be named, the third vertical or division will be a new one that will be responsible for long-term planning for the country as well as evaluation of flagship social sector schemes through an existing but much stronger programme evaluation organisation existing within the commission.

"While all the three divisions will be headed by a secretary, the government may rope in experts at the advisor level to strengthen the planning and monitoring division," the official added.

As per the proposal, the interstate council, which is headed by the prime minister, will be responsible for routing the state plans to finance ministry besides coordinating with central ministries on all developmental schemes of the states. However, the security issues that were being handled by the council will continue to be vested with the home ministry.

An email query sent to planning secretary Sindhushree Khullar did not elicit any response. Until last year, annual plans of the states were finalised by the Planning Commission after consultation with the finance ministry and the funds were routed through the commission. However, since the BJP-led NDA government, which took charge in May, decided to replace the institution with a new one, the work of allocation of funds to states has been moved to the finance ministry.


The UIDAI, which is an attached office of the Planning Commission, is responsible for generating Aadhaar or a unique identity for all by March 2015. Once the target is achieved, the government is thinking of making Aadhaar mandatory for doling out benefits under its social security schemes through a DBT platform and hence it has decided to move DBT out of finance ministry to the commission for better synergy and coordination between the two.

6084 - Krishna tops in fake Aadhaar cards - The Hindu

VIJAYAWADA, November 27, 2014
Updated: November 27, 2014 00:46 IST



Police unearth 6,500 such cards; deputy tahsildars also involved in the fraud

Krishna district has the dubious distinction of unearthing 6,500 illegal Aadhaar cards and according to police authorities this is the first time such a case was registered in the State.

This was revealed by Superintendent of Police G. Vijaya Kumar during the district review meeting which was attended by Irrigation Minister Devineni Umamaheswara Rao, District Collector M. Raghunandan Rao, Excise Minister Kollu Ravindra and others.

Mr. Kumar said the issue came to light under Gudivada limits and it was noticed that two deputy tahsildars were also involved in the irregularity. Already, a few people were taken into custody and one deputy tahsildar was absconding, he added.



6083 - Maharashtra govt pilots Aadhaar-based e-locker for documents - Medianama

25 Nov 2014 by Shashidhar KJ

The Maharashtra government has started testing an Aadhaar-linked  e-locker service on a pilot basis, which can store important documents such as birth certificates, passports, and educational qualifications, reports DNA.

The service called Maha Digital Locker will allow citizens to access these documents, which are frequently required for government services and applying jobs. According to the website, the service will help to pre-populate most of the fields from an XML file which is kept in the e-locker. It also includes a folder to upload your old certificates and the service will also push any certificate issued by the Maharashtra Government.  

The service will allow citizens to fill up government forms with a single click.

Rajesh Aggrawal, Maharashtra principal secretary for IT, said that the service will be operational in three weeks. Currently, the service has a authentication through mobile-based one time password (OTP) but is also looking at beefing up security through biometric OTP.

Earlier this month, the Indian government introduced an Aadhaar-based digital life certificate to help ease the process of pension payments. The new service will allow the Pension Disbursing Agency to authenticate a pensioner without them having to be physically present. The service’s application records the pensioner’s Aadhaar number and biometric details from a mobile device or computer device which will upload the biometric information to a central database in real-time allowing the agency to access a Digital Life Certificate.

A number of state government run schemes had made Aadhaar mandatory, including the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) which linked Aadhaar to employee salary, the revenue department made Aadhaar mandatory for services offered by the department, and the Bombay High Court had even suggested the state government to consider linking Aadhaar to ration cards to reduce instances of fake and duplicate cards.

As of now, over 70.7 crore Aadhaar numbers have been generated by the UIDAI since August 2010 when the first  Aadhaar number was generated. It claims Aadhaar coverage in nine states/UTs, including Andhra Pradesh, Delhi, Kerala, and Himachal Pradesh has crossed 90%, while seven states/UTs now have Aadhaar coverage between 70-90%.

6082 - How to Download a Copy of Your Aadhaar Card - NDTV


by NDTV Correspondent, November 26, 2014

If you've misplaced your Aadhaar card, don't panic because you can easily download a fresh copy. It needs you to know your Aadhaar number, but you can easily look that up online.

The unique 12-digit government identification is not compulsory to have, but it serves as an identity proof on most forms that you'll fill, and some government agencies also require the Aadhaar these days. It is issued by the Unique Identification Authority of India on behalf of the Indian government.

The good thing about Aadhaar is that unlike some other identity cards, its digital copy, downloaded from the UIDAI website, is as valid as the original card. So whether you've misplaced your card and need a new one, or just wanted to get a digital copy of the card to submit with a form online, the official website has you covered.

Enrolling for Aadhaar is free and so is the process to obtain a digital duplicate; just follow the steps below and you're done.

Getting your UID number
To download a copy of the Aadhaar card, you need to know your UID number or your Enrolment ID. If you've gotten your Aadhaar already, then it's generally a good idea to note down the number somewhere. If you've misplaced the Aadhaar, then look for the enrolment form to check your Enrolment ID. In case you don't have either, then you need to look this number up first. Here's what you need to do:
  1. Go to the UIDAI website.
  2. Make sure that Aadhaar No (UID) is selected from the two options near the top of the screen.
  3. Type in your full name, as printed on the Aadhaar card.
  4. Type either the email address or phone number that you used to register for Aadhaar.
  5. Enter the characters you see in the image above Enter the Security Code.
  6. Click Get OTP.
  7. A one-time password will be sent to your email address or phone number, whichever you entered in the form. Enter this password in the form next to Enter OTP.
  8. Click Verify OTP.
  9. Now you'll receive your Aadhaar number on via SMS or email.

6081 - Permanent NPR enrolment centre (PNEC) at Jiribam - Kangla On Line



November 24, 2014 22:33

JIRIBAM, November 24: 

A circular released by SDC (HQ) Jiribam, S. Imoshana Meitei has said that a permanent NPR Enrollment Centre (PNEC) will be opened at the office of the Additional Deputy commissioner, Jiribam from November 24 onward.

It was stated that those who were left out in the previous rounds of Aadhaar/NPR enrolment may visit during the office hours for capturing of Bio metric Images for Aadhaar/NPR enrolment. It has been reported that it will be the last round of the enrolment process for Jiribam and the office will not entertain any further request or complaint from any individual or group regarding AADHAR/NPR enrolment if one fail to avail oneself of this opportunity.

Thursday, November 27, 2014

6080 - Utah Considers Cutting Off Water to the NSA’s Monster Data Center - Wired


An aerial view of the cooling units at the NSA’s Utah Data Center in Bluffdale, Utah.  Rick Bowmer/AP

Lawmakers are considering a bill that would shut off the water spigot to the massive data center operated by the National Security Agency in Bluffdale, Utah.

The legislation, proposed by Utah lawmaker Marc Roberts, is due to go to the floor of the Utah House of Representatives early next year, but it was debated in a Public Utilities and Technology Interim Committee meeting on Wednesday. The bill, H.B. 161, directs municipalities like Bluffdale to “refuse support to any federal agency which collects electronic data within this state.”

The NSA brought its Bluffdale data center online about a year ago, taking advantage Utah’s cheap power and a cut-rate deal for millions of gallons of local water, used to cool the 1-million-square-foot building’s servers. Roberts’ bill, however, would prohibit the NSA from negotiating new water deals when its current Bluffdale agreement runs out in 2021.

The law seems like a long-shot to clear legislative hurdles when Utah’s legislature re-convenes next year, but Wednesday’s committee hearing was remarkable, nonetheless, says Nate Carlisle, a reporter with the Salt Lake Tribune who has waged a fight with the NSA and Bluffdale officials to determine how much water the data center is actually using. “What’s noteworthy is no one on the panel said: ‘Hey, wait a minute, we can’t do this,'” he says. “They had some specific concerns about the language of the bill, but there was no outright opposition.”
Utah lawmakers on the committee could have voted to give the bill an “unfavorable” review on the spot, essentially dooming it on the floor, but they didn’t do that.

Instead, they simply listened to testimony on the NSA and Bluffdale’s support of the center. “I just don’t want to subsidize what they’re doing on the back of our citizens,” Carlisle quotes Republican Representative Roger Barrus as saying during the meeting.

Utah has a long history of disputes with the federal government, but this is the first time Carlisle remembers anyone proposing to cut off water to a federal agency. “I think it’s representative of an attitude change in Utah that the bill is even being discussed,” he says.

6079 - Surveillance, Profiling and Exclusion: The Murky Politics of an Identification Project (UID) by Usha Ramanathan at MIT

6078 - Snowden’s exile a warning against UID scheme - Niti Central

Snowden’s exile a warning against UID scheme
AUG 10, 2013



It is strange that no human rights activist or political party in India has demanded that the UPA Government immediately destroy the vast biometric data of citizens that it collected illegally, even after Edward Snowden exposed the mass surveillance programmes being run by the Governments of the United States and Britain, with at least one server planted on the territory of India.

Snowden escaped incarceration for life in some isolated Guantanamo-type facility by securing ‘temporary’ asylum in Russia, after Washington grounded him at Moscow airport by cancelling his passport. He is likely to remain in Russia for the rest of his life, an irony that could make Moscow the new destination of those fleeing from the repulsive intrusiveness that George Orwell foresaw would be the fate of Western democracies. Big Brother is indeed watching you — all of us, in fact.


But no country over which the Americans have planted their spy cameras and listening devices is as vulnerable as India, because none other has so brazenly collected the biometric data of its entire population. The unique identification (Aadhar) programme has been executed illegally without Parliamentary sanction, at the expense of the taxpayer. Congress regimes like the Delhi Government have illegally forced citizens to enroll under the programme by denying property registration and other civic rights without an Aadhar number.

Right-thinking citizens always had doubts about the intent of the project — which can cancel the citizenship, voting rights, even bank accounts, of citizens — with a single click on the delete button. This is the ultimate in totalitarian power that has always been sought by the security establishments of countries like America which are committed to world domination, which is why the resistance to these powerful technologies emanates from there.

Biometric data is prone to misuse. Its very safety is difficult to guarantee in a world full of accomplished hackers, not to mention compulsive snoops. A particular denomination that feels targeted when certain crimes take place would be especially vulnerable in this regard. This is a grave danger to the entire citizenry, and the Supreme Court would do well, even at this late stage, to order the scrapping of the project and the destruction of all data. It never had any genuine justification, and after the expose by Snowden — who worked for both the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the National Security Agency (NSA) — there is no reason to believe that the data is safe.

So dogged is America in its pursuit of Snowden and all who helped him, even inadvertently, that an encrypted email service believed to have been used by him, shut down suddenly on August 8, after the US Government tried to gain access to customer information. The owner, Ladar Levison, explained to customers, “I have been forced to make a difficult decision: to become complicit in crimes against the American people, or walk away from nearly 10 years of hard work by shutting down Lavabit.”


He further warned, “This experience has taught me one very important lesson: without Congressional action or a strong judicial precedent, I would strongly recommend against anyone trusting their private data to a company with physical ties to the United States.” This was a hint at Google Inc, Microsoft Corp and other large providers who, according to Snowden’s leaks, were forced to help intelligence authorities gather email and other data on their users. Soon afterwards, another famous service, Silent Mail, also closed down, seeing the writing on the wall.

The sheer scale of NSA intrusion is causing some misgivings even in the normally discreet mainstream media, with the New York Times editorially commenting on August 8, “Time and again, the NSA has pushed past the limits that lawmakers thought they had imposed to prevent it from invading basic privacy, as guaranteed by the Constitution.” The NSA, the newspaper noted, “copies virtually all overseas messages that Americans send or receive, then scans them to see if they contain any references to people or subjects the agency thinks might have a link to terrorists… data collection on this scale… clearly shreds a common-sense understanding of the Fourth Amendment.” It called for Congress to clamp down on snooping that is not connected to specific targets.

Meanwhile, in the Capital alone, the Delhi State Election Commission found during the course of a routine exercise to weed out bogus voters, that there are over 12 lakh fake names on the voters’ list. In one instance alone, 30 residents of Seelampur got voter identity cards on the basis of a single Aadhar Card (no. 229575371505).

This means that all 30 persons had the same address proof with the same serial number, but different names and photographs. This is not possible without official complicity. It is clearly intended to facilitate bogus voting at election time. It is likely that some of the persons thus given voter identity cards may not be genuine citizens of India. Indeed, this was one of the greatest objections to the Unique Identification Programme in the first place.

Imagine what a foreign Government could do with citizens’ biometric data. Imagine if a country known to sponsor terror got its hands on our biometric data — it could use it to implicate innocent Indians in crimes they did not commit, to forge citizenship cards for its operatives, or to clean out target bank accounts. The possibilities are endless.

Another interesting scam that has come to light in the capital is that against a population of 16.8 million (2011 Census), Delhi has 18 million people on its ration cards. Since the middle classes were made to surrender their ration cards after the voter identity cards were introduced some decades ago, this means that at least 50 per cent, if not more, of the names on the ration cards are bogus.

This is clearly a scam to benefit certain chosen food grain dealers under the guise of the Food Security Bill that Sonia Gandhi hopes to push through in the Parliament session, in order to win the next election.

The food and supplies department claims it will weed out bogus claimants via Aadhar, and the Election Commission has already shown us how that can be fudged. So we are going to have a scam of unprecedented numbers in the guise of rectifying the shortcomings of the old public distribution system (PDS).

Disclaimer: Opinions expressed in this article are the author's personal opinions. Information, facts or opinions shared by the Author do not reflect the views of Niti Central and Niti Central is not responsible or liable for the same. The Author is responsible for accuracy, completeness, suitability and validity of any information in this article.

ABOUT AUTHOR







Sandhya Jain is a political analyst and independent researcher. She is the author of ‘Adi Deo Arya Devata- A Panoramic View of Tribal-Hindu Cultural Interface’ (Rupa & Co., 2004) and ‘Evangelical Intrusions. Tripura: A Case Study’ (Rupa & Co., 2009).

6077 - Time to think of Aadhaar’s alternatives by Dr Anupam Saraph - Sunday Guardian


OPINION
ANUPAM SARAPH








Dr Anupam Saraph is a professor, Future Designer, former governance and IT adviser to Goa CM Manohar Parrikar and World Economic Forum.


In place of Aadhaar, the government should enable a Shared ID at oneid.gov.in.



The Aadhaar does not serve any purpose of governance. It does not protect public interest. Since it has failed to convince anyone of its benefits, except the private interests served by its implementation, it's time to look for alternatives to Aadhaar.

In place of Aadhaar, the government may enable a Shared ID at oneid.gov.in. The idea of "Shared ID", as designed in Pune, is to allow citizens to create, own and share their own id. They have complete control on who can see or use the id.

If the Shared ID is shared with a government agency, it will allow the owner of the id to verify and associate their government records like birth, marriage, etc. These records will then remain associated with the Shared ID. Any requests to link the same government record to multiple owners will trigger an alert or even an audit of the owner's id. This is exactly the opposite of what the Aadhaar does. Unlike the Aadhaar, which makes every id have Aadhaar as a primary key, the Shared ID associates other ids as verification and does not expose them to any modification.

The citizens who submit their Shared ID to any government agency can access information on incentives, schemes, and programmes they automatically qualified for, or availed, based on their profile. They can also access information on demography, energy use, water use, land use, mobility and other details in their neighbourhood after logging in to their account on oneid.gov.in. Importantly, the Shared ID is not necessary for delivering any entitlement, but rather allows those who create a Shared ID to keep a track of all the entitlements they receive. This id serves the purpose of allowing the citizen to manage their id and contact sharing, and keep a passbook of services, rights, benefits or entitlements qualified for or availed during their lifetime. For those digitally excluded, the local post office may create and manage Shared ID accounts that would be subject to audit.

Although the government has information on every citizen, it does not have a mechanism to identify beneficiaries proactively without requiring those who wish to benefit from a scheme to fill various forms and submit many documents providing information that the government itself issued or already has. 

This is both a waste of resources as also a way to exclude those who may really qualify.

The government can overcome this by internally connecting the birth, marriage, address registrations and death records without requiring any form, id numbers or id from citizens to create a National Population Register (NPR). This would then be used to identify the benefits each citizen is entitled to. This would also ensure that no citizen would need to submit to government any document issued by the government itself. While automatic entitlements and benefits could be provided to beneficiaries identified by the NPR, manual benefits should continue to those not automatically included in NPR.

For those who have a Shared ID, their entitlements would be visible on their Shared ID account. In order to ensure full inclusion, all those eligible for various benefits would be listed on beneficiaries.gov.in for public audit. Such a system serves the purpose of enabling inclusion of all citizens and not that of exclusion from services, as does the Aadhaar.

To ensure that no one is denied any service, right, benefit or entitlement for want of an id, the government may require that each agency delivering any entitlement or right will register anyone not already in their registry, who benefits from their service, right, benefit or entitlement. Such a record would be maintained to eliminate the need to re-register the beneficiary for future transactions and ensure the delivery of rights without any hassles, while at the same time permitting any audit of the delivery of entitlements and rights. In order to ensure full inclusion, all those having taken benefits would be listed at beneficiaries.gov.in for public audit. Those who have some records with the government would already be on the beneficiaries.gov.in list. For those who are not on the list this would ensure inclusion to receive benefits. On receiving benefits they too would be listed on beneficiaries.gov.in for a public audit. Such a system, then, serves the purpose of enabling audit for the government and not that of blocking services, as the Aadhaar does.

The unbanked may access cash entitlements, loans and grants at the nearest post office branch across the country. The post office would create a Shared ID of the beneficiary to enable audit of the entitlements delivered and to ensure the next time round the person does not have to recreate the id.

Any change of address would be updated by the new post office. The post-office savings account will encourage the unbanked to save through the Shared ID. It will also enable a way to deliver insurance to the beneficiaries.

These alternatives to the Aadhaar will fit Prime Minister Narendra Modi's minimum government vision and ensure good governance.

6076 - Six months of Modi government: Six big ideas - Business Standard


Jan Dhan Yojana, Swachh Bharat, Make in India among initiatives launched by the govt


BS Reporter  November 24, 2014 Last Updated at 10:06 IST

The six big ideas floated by the Narendra Modi government in his six months in office:

Jan Dhan Yojana

With a substantial section of society still outside the ambit of the formal financial system, the recent initiative which aims to bring the excluded into the banking system over the next few years is a laudable one. But legitimate concerns remain. For one, access to banking services may not translate to usage as the poor may simply opt against engaging with the system. Concerns also exist about the financial viability of maintaining such accounts. But if coverage is extended, especially to the rural poor, then in conjunction with the Aadhaar platform, it could facilitate a shift towards cash transfers.

Swachh Bharat

A brilliant event manager,” L K Advani sa­id of former protégé Na­r­­endra Modi in Ap­r­il. On October 2, Modi showed how he is ar­g­u­a­b­ly the most-skil­l­­ed mass comm­u­n­i­c­a­t­or among Indian leaders. He chose Ma­h­a­­tma Gandhi’s birth anni­ve­r­s­a­ry to pi­ck up a br­o­om and launch the Swachh Bha­r­a­t Abh­i­y­an. Few reme­m­b­ered how Swachh Bha­r­a­t was in fact the repac­k­a­g­ed Nir­mal Bharat sani­t­a­t­i­on progra­m­­­mes laun­c­hed by the Atal Bihari Vajpa­y­ee-led NDA government and Manmoh­an Sin­gh-led UPA govern­ments. But Mo­di is the fi­r­st PM to take up the cause of cl­e­an­l­i­ne­ss wi­­th such con­v­i­c­t­ion and vigo­ur. He has attempted to ma­ke a mass mo­v­e­ment out of an issue that affects not only peop­le’s he­a­­lth but is also an attack on social ills like un­tou­chability and manual scav­e­n­g­i­ng.


Make in India

While successive governments have acknowledged the need to raise the share of manufacturing in GDP, there has been a mismatch between policies and the rhetoric. The new government’s innovative Make in India campaign signals its commitment to transforming India into the manufacturing hub of the world. The importance of manufacturing stems from the fact that the sector can serve as a source of employment for the bulk of unskilled and semi-skilled workers currently engaged in the agricultural sector. But the success of this initiative depends on the degree to which the government can provide an enabling environment by improving the ease of doing business in India.

Death of the Planning Commission

The death of the Planning Commission, announced by Prime Minister Naren­d­ra Modi from the ramparts of Red Fort, is pr­o­bably the biggest symbolic break from the Nehruvian socialist era. Derided as a “parking lot” for political cr­o­­nies and superannuated civil servants by Arun Shourie, the Co­m­mission was of­t­en accused of being in­sen­­sitive to the problems of states. While the rele­van­ce of the Commission in an increasingly market-oriented economy is debatable, whether the new organisation proposed in its place will be more in tune with realities or not remains to be seem. To what extent it succeeds in making states “equal partners” in the decision-making process remains to be seen.


Digital India

In his first Independence Day speech, the prime minister captivated the youth by talking of his dream of a Digital India by 2019. Whether its e-gov­e­­rnance, broad­band for all, IT-enabled ed­ucation or telemedicine, the Digital India plan is meant to cover it all. To beg­in with, the government is working on a ~500-crore plan, and has already ini­tia­t­ed biometric attendance in government offices. Delivery of government services through a unified portal has been plan­n­ed under it. Recently, Aadhaar-based di­g­i­tal life certificates called Jeevan Pramaan were launched for pensioners. The goal is to simplify the process of pension pay­me­nts. India must first get a seamless broad­band and wi-fi connectivity up to the last mile, for the plan to actually work.

Smart Cities

One of the ideas from the BJP poll mani­fe­sto, this saw early action. In its first Bu­d­get in July, this government allocat­ed ~7,060 crore for smart cities, though the initial estimate for the project was ~35,000 crore per annum. The plan is to build 100 smart cities in India over a pe­r­i­od of time. Smart cities are broadly defin­ed as urban spaces that are techno­lo­g­i­ca­l­ly integrated, well-planned and environ­ment-friendly. It’s a long-term project and could well be spread over 10 years or more, officials say. A flexible PPP (public-private partnership) model is being work­ed out; many countries including the US, Japan and Singapore, have committed to play a role. Critics say power outages, po­or infrastructure and dearth of clean drinking water may play spoilsport.

6075 - 65 per cent of Tamil Nadu population issued Aadhar number: Official - Economic Times

PTI Nov 24, 2014, 07.58PM IST

CHENNAI: Aadhar number has been issued to 65 per cent of the total population of Tamil Nadu so far, a senior state government official said today.

"While bio metric data has been acquired for 5,00,87,395 persons (or 69 per cent) in Tamil Nadu, 4,71,75,490 (65 per cent) of them have been issued an Aadhar number as of now," Principal Secretary (Food) M P Nirmala said in a statement.

Since the process of acquiring bio metric data and issuing Aadhar numbers are in progress, family cards would be pasted with an extra sheet for extension for 2015 from December this year, she said.

Ever since the Home Ministry has come out in full support of previous UPA-announced Aadhaar scheme saying it would facilitate "anytime, anywhere, anyhow" authentication to its beneficiaries, Aadhar card processing has been renewed in all states.


During the previous UPA regime, the Home Ministry had raised concerns over the sanctity of the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI)'s database, saying uniqueness of identity was not a necessary condition for ensuring authenticity of identity or genuineness of other entries or records of Aadhaar numbers.

6074 - Early-leavers to pay with half-day leave - Deccan Herald

New Delhi, Nov 23, 2014, DHNS:

Leaving early from work will cost a Central government employee half a day’s leave.

With the Centre planning to expand Aadhaar-linked biometric attendance system to all its offices by January-end, latecomers and early-leavers will be in trouble as there will be an electronic trail of their movements during work.


The Aadhaar-Enabled Biometric Attendance System (AEBAS), an initiative of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, is being installed in all Central government offices.

The government has set a deadline of December 31 for offices in Delhi to have AEBAS installed, while offices in other cities should have it by January 26 next year. The Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT) has issued an order in this regard.



The DoPT has said that half a day’s casual leave would be debited for each day of late attendance, but late attendance up to an hour on not more than two occasions in a month, and for justifiable reasons, might be condoned by the competent authority.

In addition to debiting casual leave, disciplinary action may also be taken against habitually late government servants. “Early leaving is also to be treated in the same manner as latecoming,” said the order. The web portal to display government servants’ attendance publicly showed that around 1,140 employees worked on Sunday in different departments.

Thirty-eight officials of the Home Ministry had worked on a Sunday, 34 of them in North Block, where the ministry is located. Fifteen External Affairs Ministry officials worked in South Block, while another 15 worked in different other offices. The highest number of officials present on Sunday belonged to the CPWD, which had 210 officials working, followed by the Electronic Media Monitoring Wing’s 77.

As of now, 62,571 employees in 300 offices have been registered with the biometric portal, created by a team led by Ram Sewak Sharma, the Union Communication and IT secretary who was chief secretary in Jharkhand.

In the last one and a half months, only 11,405 employees were added to the system, prompting the government to set a deadline.

6073 - IT to keep graft at bay: Maharashtra CM - TNN

Chittaranjan Tembhekar, TNN | Nov 24, 2014, 11.10PM IST

MUMBAI: Chief minister Devendra Fadnavis has set a five-point IT-centric agenda for the state administration, toeing the Centre's line. Sources said it was aimed at eliminating the scope for corruption, and introducing transparency, efficiency and accountability in day-to-day administration.

The state will start from its own employees, who will be monitored for their presence on the field during outdoor visits. For all employees, including those at the chief minister's office, electronic file clearance will be compulsory so that employees can concentrate on the field and people-oriented work. "The government will make the geo-coordination application mand- atory for mobile handsets of every government employee, to know their location during duty hours. No employee can stay at home and show field visits or tours as the reason," the sources said.

Tenders of work costing Rs3 lakh and above will be processed online; the earlier limit was Rs10 lakh. "This will ensure accountability and transparency even for smaller projects. The file clearance system will fix accountability for delays and wrong remarks," Mantralaya sources said.


The state will fix a deadline for file clearance in its offices, including Mantralaya, to avoid wastage of time and energy in manually clearing them. Similarly, state government employees' salaries will be deposited in their bank accounts through the Aadhaar payment bridge. Employees will have to authenticate accounts with their Aadhaar ID, based on which the state treasury will transfer the salary.

These IT initiatives were discussed and formulated for early execution at a meeting of IT department officials in the presence of Fadnavis recently. Top secretaries at Mantralaya, including chief secretary Swadheen Kshtriya, IT secretary Rajesh Agrawal and newly appointed officer on special duty to the CMO for IT upgrade, Kaustubh Dhawase, were present, besides representatives of IT industry giants such as Nasscom, TCS and Cognizant.

Fadnavis also directed the state to review the e-tendering process to know if it had really introduced transparency in financial dealings and suggest if a further upgrade was possible.

Electronic chalans for vehicles flouting traffic rules was another initiative top on the government's agenda.

The state will also set up a taskforce under the CM's leadership to monitor the progress of permission and approvals to industries. "It will monitor applications on a day-to-day basis. Even issues such as women safety, being faced by offices operating late at night, will be administered and monitored," an official said.


6072 - Tamil Nadu govt extends validity of present ration cards - TNN

Tamil Nadu govt extends validity of present ration cards
B Sivakumar, TNN | Nov 24, 2014, 04.25PM IST

An extra slip will be pasted on the ration cards when the card holders visit fair price shops in December.

CHENNAI: The Tamil Nadu government on Monday decided to extend the validity of the ration cards currently in use till the end of 2015. 

An extra slip will be pasted on the ration cards when the card holders visit fair price shops in December. 

A decision to this effect was taken at a review meeting convened by food minister R Kamaraj. 

"The residents need to seek extra slips for the whole next year while visiting the shops next month," said an official statement. 

The government decided to extend the current ration cards due to the non-completion of the Aadhaar enumeration in various districts, including Chennai. 

As of now, a little more than 50 million people have registered their biometrics, and 4.71 lakh Aadhaar numbers have been allocated. 

"The government is in the process of computerizing shifting of commodities from godowns to fair price shops, maintaining stock positions at shops, issuing new ration cards and weeding out fake and duplicate cards," said the statement. 

The new cards will be issued only after the computerization process is completed. 

Residents with non-commodity ration cards can register online for new cards. 

The minister said 612 persons had been arrested for smuggling PDS commodities from May 2011 till now. 


Food secretary M P Nirmala, civil supplies commissioner S Gopalakrishnan and others officials attended the meeting. 

6071 - Mental Health, Aadhaar Bills on Anvil - New Indian Express

By Yatish Yadav
Published: 24th November 2014 06:13 AM

NEW DELHI: The government has classified Bills to be passed during the Winter Session of Parliament starting Monday under three categories, A, B and C, with bills under A being the highest priority.

Among 25 priority bills, the government may push for Insurance Laws (Amendment) Bill pending in Rajya Sabha, The Mental Health Care Bill, 2013, The National Identification Authority Bill, 2010, for providing legislative cover to Aadhaar scheme, Merchant Shipping Amendment Bill, 2013, and the Constitution (Scheduled Castes) Orders (Amendment) Bill, 2014, to modify the list of Scheduled Castes in four states of Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Odisha and Tripura.

Despite the chit fund controversy raging in the country, the law to ban Ponzi schemes will be further delayed as the Prize Chits & Money Circulations Schemes (Banning) Amendment Bill 2014 is not yet ready.

Prevention of Bribery of Foreign Public Officials Bill to prevent corruption related to bribing of foreign officials is unlikely to be introduced in the coming session. However, Prevention of Corruption (Amendment) Bill suggested in priority ‘C’ is ready but Ministry of Personnel is yet to prepare a Cabinet note.

The introduction of Goods and Service Tax (GST) billed as landmark reform measure has been slotted under the least important category. The GST bill is not ready yet, the note suggests. Even two laws related to Nuclear energy-the Nuclear Safety Regulatory Authority Bill, 2014, and the Atomic Energy and Civil Liability for Nuclear Damages Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2014, are under ‘C’ Category.

The note says the Civil Aviation Authority Bill, 2014, to create Independent Civil Authority replacing Directorate General of Civil Aviation is not ready while the Cabinet note for Anti-hijacking (Amendment) Bill, 2010, has been prepared but it is yet to get Cabinet approval.

“The Prime Minister said that Goverment is ready to take up all issues. With collective wisdom, issues of all parties can be taken forward,” Parliamentary Affairs Minister M Venkaiah Naidu said after an all party meeting not attended by TMC and Samajwadi Party.


About 40 leaders from 26 parties participated in the meeting, which was also attended by Congress, Left parties and JD(U).