This Article is From Jul 20, 2022

Assam Citizens' Register Data Release After Aadhaar-Type Security: Centre

The Supreme Court -- which is monitoring the Assam NRC process -- has directed that an "appropriate regime be enacted on lines similar to the security regime provided for Aadhaar data."

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India News Written by
Guwahati:

The data of Assam's National Register of Citizens will be released only after a data security system like Aadhaar is established, the Centre has said, underscoring that this has been mandated by the Supreme Court. Thereafter, the data will be released to the Centre, state and the RGI (Registrar General of India), the government said.

The data of the Assam NRC lists published in 2019 has not yet been officially notified by the Registrar General of India.

On August 13, 2019 the Supreme Court -- which is monitoring the Assam NRC process -- directed that an "appropriate regime be enacted on lines similar to the security regime provided for Aadhaar data."

Today, responding to a question of Assam Congress MP Abdul Khaleque in the Lok Sabha, junior home minister Nityanand Rai pointed to the court's order.

"On the  directions  of  the   Supreme  Court,  the  supplementary  list  of inclusions  and  exclusions  have  been  published  on  31st  August,  2019," he said.

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The Supreme Court, he added, has  directed  the  State  Coordinator of NRC, Assam,  "to  enact an appropriate  security  regime  on  lines  similar  to  the  security  regime  provided  for Aadhaar  data  and  only  thereafter  the  list  shall  be made  available  to  the  State  Government,  Central  Government  and  Registrar General of India".  

Sources in the NRC directorate indicated that the authorities have submitted a proposal for the creation of an Aadhaar-like regime to the RGI. The project will cost around Rs 18 crore and can be completed in around seven months, sources said.

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The final NRC list in Assam, published on August 2019, had found more than 31.1 million people eligible to be included. But it had left out over 1.9 million people, setting off a huge controversy.

Rejection slips are yet to be issued to those excluded – who can move the Foreigners' Tribunal to challenge the decision – and the RGI has not yet notified the NRC as final.

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