Source: Global Research and Corbett Report
James Corbett
TRANSCRIPT AND SOURCES:
James Corbett
TRANSCRIPT AND SOURCES:
The Indian government is ramping up efforts to fingerprint and iris 
scan the entirety of its 1.2 billion citizens in an ambitious scheme to 
issue national ID cards with biometric details. The plan has so far 
already enrolled 110 million people and issued 60 million numbers, with the aim of enrolling 200 million by this March and 600 million by 2014.
The project stems from two separate, overlapping schemes,
 the Unique Identifcation program (UID), aimed at providing India’s 200 
million poorest citizens with failsafe access to the country’s welfare 
system, and the National Population Register (NPR), aimed at providing a
 national ID card to help identify and deport undocumented immigrants.
Last month, the UID plan hit a roadblock when a Parliamentary committee issued a blistering attack
 on the scheme, calling it “directionless” and “full of uncertainty,” 
while critics note the danger of the project in the absence of coherent 
privacy laws. Just how the government will use the information, or even 
who will have access to it, has yet to be properly determined.
Although fast becoming the largest such database in the world, it is 
not the only government-administered repository of biometric details. 
Nations across the globe are increasingly turning to the collection of 
biometric information under a host of programs, including proposed national id schemes like the one being implemented in India.
Countries around the world are now adopting biometric passports
 and travel documents that use fingerprints and digital photographs to 
verify passenger identity. Presented as a way of streamlining and 
standardizing entry and exit procedures at national borders, what the 
public is not told is that these documents are the end result of a 
years-long process of coordination that has codified the technical specifications for these systems via international agreements.
 In addition, countries are increasingly agreeing on an infrastructure 
for sharing their biometric databases between each other via database sharing agreements that have received scant attention.
Governments around the world are eager to tout the potential benefits of these national identification registers in glossy promotional videos
 depicting gleaming science-fiction-like future societies of efficiency,
 however the privacy and civil liberties implications of this technology
 are seldom discussed.
The UK under the Labour government of Tony Blair and later Gordon Brown attempted to implement a national identity register
 and ID card system that would have required the logging of an extensive
 amount of personal and biometric information in a central database, but
 the program caused waves of protest and the government eventually gave 
in to the public outcry, scrapping the plan for the national registry and instead only implementing the biometric id scheme for foreign nationals:
Now, concerned Indian citizens are hoping that a boycott
 can be organized to help derail the Indian id card scheme to prevent 
the institution of an all-seeing surveillance state, and to keep this 
information from being sold to the highest bidder in a country notorious
 for its official corruption.
