Aadhaar: How to get your unique ID from govt of India
India's
ambitious Unique ID project dubbed "Aadhaar", which aims to give every
Indian citizen a unique number mapped to biometrics, was launched on
Wednesday in the Nadurbar district of Maharashtra. The Technoholik.com
team got a sneak peek at the
UIDAI (Unique ID Authority of India) tech centre in
Bangalore, to tell you everything you need to know about the enrolment process.
The setup The enrollment officer (EO) sits at right angles to you and enters data into a laptop. The insight of the
Aadhaar
team here is that the person getting enrolled must see what is being
entered. Thus there's a monitor in front of you, which mirrors the
enrolment officer's screen so that you can point out spelling mistakes
or other errors. If the person getting enrolled is illiterate, he or
she can nominate someone to accompany and verify. There's a small laser
printer behind the EO's laptop and a webcam, fingerprint reader and
iris scanner account for the remainder of the hardware setup. Unless,
of course, you count the light bulb hanging from the ceiling and a
white "roll-up" chart behind you for the "passport photo studio"
effect!
Compulsory information
Name (first and last name compulsory but middle name optional), Gender
(Male/Female/Transgender) and Date of Birth are the compulsory fields.
Whereas postal address is also required, it's more for the sake of
mailing your UID number than strictly being a proof of residence. The
EO asks you for a PIN code and the city/district fields are
automatically populated. The rest of the address is entered manually.
Supporting documents
The UID team acknowledges the fact that a large number of people may
not have any supporting documents to prove their identity. In this
case, one is allowed to bring another resident who is already in
possession of an Aadhaar number to be an "introducer" by vouching for
the person seeking to enroll. Of course, there is scope for fraud
either with a colluding introducer or by just using fake supporting
documents. However, the whole point of Aadhaar is that one can only
fake one's identity once and this prevents large-scale "ghost identity"
creation, which is the bane of most Indian government schemes. The
great PAN (Permanent Account Number with the Income Tax department)
card scam after all involved a single person creating thousands of
different PAN numbers.
Photograph
A photograph is taken of the person getting enrolled, purely for the
purpose of printing it out on the enrolment receipt, so that illiterate
residents have some way of knowing that the receipt indeed belongs to
them. Beyond that, the photograph serves no biometric or authentication
purpose.
Biometrics
First there's an iris scan where you look into a binocular-like device
held up to your eyes by the EO. After that it's the four fingers of
each hand, followed by both thumbs (a process familiar to those
entering the US) for your 10 fingerprints.
The wait
The EO makes you review the data entered one final time before giving
you a laser-printed receipt. Whereas the residents of Tembhali, the
"Aadhaar village", were to get their numbers today, the rest of us
won't be that lucky. We'll only get to walk away with our receipts and
have to wait for the actual number to be delivered by
India Post!