Media will parrot it, AG tells petitioner who called India a concentration camp in Aadhaar case
At this juncture, the bench intervened and said it cannot control the language of a lawyer unless he or she is using an "unparliamentary" word.
Stop saying Aadhaar had led to the country turning into a concentration camp, the media will parrot it, the centre said in the Supreme Court.
The high-voltage hearing before a bench headed by Justice J Chelameswar saw Attorney General K K Venugopal strongly objecting to the use of these phrases by senior counsel Shyam Divan who appeared for those having reservations over the policy relating to the unique identification scheme.
Divan contended that the policy to make Aadhaar mandatory for availing benefits of all welfare schemes "invades upon the right to privacy of a citizen since birth" as even minors are compelled to part with their biometrics.
"We are creeping into a situation where the entire country will become a concentration camp," Divan argued before the bench which also comprised Justices A M Khanwilkar and Navin Sinha.
He said the Centre cannot compel anyone to give his or her biometrics as this will enable the government to have a "complete control over citizens, right from birth ... which means it will be a totalitarian state".
"It will be a totalitarian state as each and every movement is tracked since your birth and the entire country becomes a concentration camp," he asserted.
The Attorney General intervened at this stage and said Divan was ignorant about the Aadhaar scheme as the people below the poverty line were going to be the beneficiaries of the welfare measures.
Venugopal, whose view was sought regarding the issue being finally decided by the Supreme Court's constitution bench, said he had objections to Divan's submission as the media would tomorrow come out with reports that India is a concentration camp.
At this juncture, the bench intervened and said it cannot control the language of a lawyer unless he or she is using an "unparliamentary" word.
"We have no control over the language unless it is unparliamentary. Hyperbole is always part of the Indian system," the bench observed.
However,
Divan
stuck
to
his
stand
and
said
"It
is
not
hyperbole.
It
is
an
under-statement".
After
this
exchange,
the
bench
deliberated
on
the
issue
of
referring
the
matter
to
a
constitution
bench
and
asked
the
parties
to
urge
the
Chief
Justice
to
set
up
a
larger
bench
to
decide
on
the
issues
relating
to
Aadhaar.
OneIndia News