Posted: Sun Oct 10 2010, 03:13 hrs
There’s a story that’s now old hat on the third floor of the Jeevan Bima building in Connaught Place, central Delhi. Of how, when Nandan Nilekani, the freshly-minted chairperson of the Unique Identity Authority of India and someone with the rank and status of a Cabinet minister, got his sarkari car, he took one look at it and asked for the lal batti on top to be removed. Here he was, talking of issuing every Indian resident an identity and doing away with that red, bulbous identity that Delhi’s power circles bask in.
“It’s a start-up, ya…,” says Nilekani, looking relaxed on a sofa in his room at the Delhi headquarters of the UIDAI. He is talking of his big switch, that “restart button” he pressed at 54 when he moved from being CEO of Infosys to heading a venture that still seems to most people an abstract idea—issuing a number to each one of India’s 1.2 billion people, a number that can potentially empower people. A year into the “start-up”, the idea has rolled out, taken the shape of a 12-digit number and got itself a name—Aadhaar, which in most Indian languages means ‘foundation’.
“Now that you have this number, what do you do with it? That’s what we are looking at next—the application. At a fundamental level, the number is an application that offers identity, mobility and authentication. So there are two major areas where this can be applied—how can the number help you open a bank account, which is what financial inclusion is about, and how can it help get you a SIM card? We are looking at other such applications,” says Nilekani.
But for people who have been outside of the system for so long, a hint of any such ‘identity’ can be tantalising.
Ganga Kapavarapu, Deputy Director General (Finance), who was among the first few people to join Nilekani’s team, recalls an incident at the Delhi launch of Aadhaar for the homeless. “A man came up to us and asked if the number was his passport, if it meant that he could now get a ration card, a PAN card, a driving licence and a string of other cards he had only heard of. We don’t make any such claims but what do you do with such huge expectations, expectations that are valid because he has a right to them as much as any one of us does,” she says.
An idea takes shape
Aadhaar has its origins in a discussion paper of the Planning Commission in 2006. Around the same time, Nilekani had come up with a similar idea in his book, Imagining India, describing unique identity as one of the key steps for getting the poor and the marginalised into the system. Three years later, in July 2009, the Unique Identification Authority of India was established with Nilekani as chairman. With Brand Nilekani at the helm and the romantic idea of a number, there were enough people willing to join the project but it was important to choose the right mix of talent and enterprise.
Today, around 150 people are at work on the number—people like Sharma, Kapavarapu and BB Nanawati (DDG, Technology) from within the government set-up, those on sabbatical from their organisations, volunteers who walked out on flourishing careers to be a part of the UID team, interns from universities across the world—all convinced about the transformational potential of the number.
The tech centre looks and functions like a start-up, with a core team of 15-20 that works at blazing momentum, little organisational hierarchy, and a lot of whiteboards on which, over the last 12 months, the technical feasibility of the UID has been established.
One of the first to join the core team in Bangalore and lead the biometrics arm, Raj Mashruwala, founder and mentor of several Silicon Valley start-ups, agreed to move from California, where his family lives, for three months; he stayed on for 13. Arriving in Bangalore with two suitcases, he met Nadhamuni at an appliance store to pick up a refrigerator and a microwave and move in to an apartment complex on Outer Ring Road, where, for the next three months, they would eke out the essentials of a project ten times the size of the US-VISIT biometric identification service.
One of the first to join the core team in Bangalore and lead the biometrics arm, Raj Mashruwala, founder and mentor of several Silicon Valley start-ups, agreed to move from California, where his family lives, for three months; he stayed on for 13. Arriving in Bangalore with two suitcases, he met Nadhamuni at an appliance store to pick up a refrigerator and a microwave and move in to an apartment complex on Outer Ring Road, where, for the next three months, they would eke out the essentials of a project ten times the size of the US-VISIT biometric identification service.
The project has drawn change-makers from across the world—from Sanjay Jain, who made the switch from being product manager for Google Maps and Google News to one for UIDAI; to Bala Parthasarathy, co-founder of the Web photo service company Snapfish, and many others.
Unlike other government set-ups that had the luxury of time, at the UID office, everything had to be done simultaneously—hiring and training staff, meetings and workshops with registrars and enrollment agencies, setting up the tech centre and the CIDR in Bangalore, and meetings and MoUs with state governments. Nilekani travelled extensively, to 23 states, and made PowerPoint presentations to 15 chief ministers. All this with an eye on the calendar—UIDAI’s commitment to the government was that the first set of numbers would be rolled out between August 2010 and February 2011.
The tech team is now working on the next set of biometric features—authentication services, address updates and registering children as and when they turn five—as well as prototypes of applications of UID in NREGA, PDS, banking, microfinance, micro-ATMs, education and healthcare.
Back in Delhi, Kapavarapu, DDG (Finance), insists she is proof that it wasn’t just people in the private sector who have glamourous stories of chucking their jobs for the pure passion of working on an ‘idea’.
Kapavarapu, an ’81-batch officer of the Indian Audit and Accountant Service, was principal Accountant General of Himachal Pradesh before she joined UIDAI in October 2009. She opens her laptop to show a picture of her earlier workplace—the gorgeous British-era Gorton Castle in Shimla. “This is something I show people when they say you guys are with the government, you wouldn’t have had to give up anything to come here,” she jokes.
When Kapavarapu and Nanawati joined the project, they worked out of a small room in Yogana Bhawan, the Planning Commission office. “Three of us shared one room, a quarter the size of this room, one PC and one table. We took turns to work,” says Nanawati.
Though the project has raised concerns of profiling and of the state infringing on citizens’ privacy, Nilekani says the stress should be on the benefits that are “overwhelming, while looking at how the risks, if any, can be mitigated.”