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ID'ing the masses may solve Indian identity crisis
By ERIKA KINETZ,Associated Press Writer AP - Tuesday, July 14
MUMBAI, India - A small square of plastic, no bigger than a credit card, is all that stands between Pralhad Dandekar and his ability to bring home food for his wife and two daughters.
It is a special identity card, issued by the state government, which all fishermen on the open seas are required to carry.
Dandekar, a wiry 58-year-old, says he applied for the card two years ago.
"I wait, wait, wait," he said.
India has a huge identity problem: too many people like Dandekar struggle to definitively establish who they are. The rich can flash passports, driver's licenses, and credit cards, but the poor rely on a jumble of electricity bills, ration cards, voting cards, and letters from local officials _ none of which is foolproof. That has made it harder for them to get jobs, open bank accounts and establish property rights, stymieing their ability to participate in, and in turn fuel, India's growth. It has also increased the potential for graft in India's massive social subsidy programs.
Enter outsourcing guru Nandan Nilekani, the man India's Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has tasked with identifying India's masses.
On July 15, Nilekani will take over as director of the Unique Identification Authority of India, a new government office that plans to issue national identity cards to all 1.2 billion Indian citizens.
Nilekani, 54, rose to prominence as a founder of Infosys Technologies Ltd., India's second-largest outsourcing firm, and has become expert at expounding the revolutionary social potential of technology.
"Identity has become a basis for exclusion," he said over coffee in Mumbai. "The poor have no access to identity. Therefore all the time they are running around re-establishing their identity."
His best-selling 2008 book, "Imagining India: Ideas for the New Country," reads like a blueprint for improving governance in India _ though he insists that when he wrote it he wasn't plugging for public office.
The book even has a section devoted to national identity cards, which he said would be "transformational" in improving the quality of government services, reducing graft, and making India's economic growth more inclusive.
"Every piece of life becomes easier," he said. "Just the simple act of saying I stand by who this person claims he is. Can you imagine the value of that?"
Unlike the United States, top business people in India rarely enter public service.
If Nilekani succeeds, he could inspire others to make the shift.
He is keenly aware, however, that establishing the unique identity of 1.2 billion Indians is mind-bogglingly complex.
"It keeps me awake at night, thinking what the hell have I got into," Nilekani said.
The challenge is twofold: He must get everyone _ including people in remote tribal areas _ an ID card and he must ensure that there are no duplicates.
Nilekani plans to create a central database of names, modeled on India's electronic securities depository, and use biometrics _ probably some combination of fingerprint and facial identification _ to ensure that every Indian gets one and only one identification number.
The first batch of ID cards will come out in 12 to 18 months, he said, but declined to specify how long it might take to complete the rollout. The agency's initial budget is 1.2 billion rupees ($24.6 million), but the total cost will likely be far higher.
"It will take years and years and years," Nilekani said. "Even if it costs a bit of money, if a few hundred million poor people get better public services, it's worth its weight in gold."
Just ask men like Dandekar. The process of getting a fisherman identity card is so predictably and excruciatingly slow that at least three dozen fishermen societies in Mumbai have started issuing temporary identity cards, so people can work while they await their state government ID. Dandekar has one, and that's the only reason he's able to ply his trade while he waits for his state ID _ which became compulsory for fishermen after the November terror attack on Mumbai.
The complexity does not end there.
All those cards are only good in the state of Maharashtra.
"I need a card that will work all over India," said fisherman Shiv Kumar Chinna Coundar, 38.
Every time he docks in a port in a different state, he has to get permission from the customs office.
The more permissions required, the more "chai pani" _ literally, "tea water," a local term for bribes _ you have to pay, he and others say.
"If they gave us a national identity card, then I wouldn't have to pay chai pani in any state," Coundar said.
There's also the question of security. Absent a foolproof means to establish who someone is, many only hire people they know _ cutting off the stream of hungry migrants who pour into Mumbai from jobs.
Boat owner Laxman Hiraji Dhanur, 60, said he has become more concerned about security since last year's terror attack on Mumbai.
Dhanur lives amid a bright jumble of fishing boats, now docked for the monsoon rains, in Bhai Bhandarkar Machimar Colony _ the same fishing village ten Pakistani attackers snuck through last November before fanning out in pairs to lay siege to the city, killing 166.
Five miles off the coast of this sleepy jumble of shanties, Ajmal Kasab, the only surviving attacker, allegedly slit the throat of the navigator of a hijacked fishing boat.
Such stories send a chill through Dhanur.
He said he can never know for certain if people are who they say they are _ or even if they are really Indian citizens. So he, like many others, relies on word of mouth.
"I only hire my relatives and friends," he said.
"If we had a foolproof national identity card, I wouldn't worry so much," he added.
He said he might even hire strangers.
Writ large, that small shift in attitude could mean easier access to jobs for millions of Indians. And that would surely be a transformation.
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