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“India plans biometric IDs for all its 1.16 billion citizens”
by India   
July 30th, 2009

India is undertaking an ambitious plan to provide identification cards to all its citizens to tackle poverty and fight terrorism. Given India's population, the ID plan will be one of the world's biggest IT projects.

The plan, which is being called "humongous" and "mind-boggling" by even those closely involved, aims to give each of India's 1.16 billion people a biometric ID card - this in a country where many rural and poor people have no documentation whatsoever to prove their identities.

But government officials say within three years, Indian citizens will each carry a plastic card with a computer chip containing personal data and proof of identity, such as a fingerprint or iris scan.

Others say four or more years is more realistic, but most agree that the ID could improve the lives of many, especially India's disadvantaged, by cutting down on the fraud that often steers cash meant for the poor and rural communities into the pockets of corrupt officials.

"Then every individual, like in any developed country, becomes part of a national registry and the data is available to authorities whether he goes to apply for a job or apply for subsidized food assistance," said Naimur Rahman, director of One World, a Delhi-based NGO that works on rural and poverty issues.

The issue of identification in India is a tangled one. There are some 20 forms of ID, ranging from food ration cards to birth certificates to tax documents, and not every ID is accepted by every office or agency.

To untangle it all, the new ID would be accepted everywhere.

Poverty and terror fight

One aim is to bring down fraud, especially when it comes to poverty-reduction programs, which are looked upon with skepticism by many since much of the money earmarked for the poor never makes it to them. It's estimated that corruption siphons off as much as 80 percent of anti-poverty funds.

"It will have some impact," said Sharad Magajan of Oxfam India. "Identification is a big problem."

The new plastic card could also help beef up national security and intelligence gathering, high on Indians' minds after last November's terrorist attacks in Mumbai, which killed 179 people. The attacks were carried out by militants from Pakistan.  

"One major goal (of the ID project) is about terrorists because the other kinds of ID were easy to forge," said Kamal Chenoy, professor of international studies at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi. "This would be a more computerized card and would not be so easy to forge."

 The big guns

 India has called out the big guns to pull off this huge task, tapping Nandan Nilekani, the 54-year-old founder and former CEO of India's biggest computer services company, Infosys, to head up the effort. Last year, he published a book, "Imagining India: Ideas for the New Century," that looks at a range of issues confronting the country.

"We have the opportunity to give every Indian citizen, for the first time, a unique identity," he said in an interview with the UK daily The Times. "We can transform the country."

Nilekani stepped down from his CEO position at Infosys two years ago and it is hoped by many that he can bring some of the skills and efficiency of India's private sector into a public sector best known for its slow-moving bureaucracy. Former Microsoft CEO Bill Gates has indicated he would like to be involved in the project as it develops.

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