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The primary tenets of democratic governance is consultation

In an effort to douse the controversy that erupted when it was revealed that the Centre had asked cell phone manufacturers to mandatorily install its Sanchar Saathi app,

the government is now executing somersaults that would do any circus acrobat proud.

 

“We have been misunderstood”, it bellows. “We only did it to protect your privacy! Of course you can delete the app! It’s not mandatory.”

 

   Some of this is obviously untrue. I don’t think anyone misunderstood what the official notification said: it is pretty categorical. But, even if we take the government’s protests at face value and accept that it was only trying to offer us love and protection, here’s what it did wrong.

 

   First of all, the government is right when it says that security is a top priority. The difference is that while it talks about security only in the context of scammers, the average citizen is more worried about the security of his or her own data when it comes to the many invasive arms of the state.

 

   Citizens may be wrong to be worried or they may well be justified in their concerns. But nothing about the response was unprecedented or unpredictable. There have been concerns about Aadhaar and citizens have also filed Right To Information requests about the provenance of DigiYatra - which have yielded no joy. (The provenance of the app is still being questioned.)

 

   So, how bright (or not bright) do you need to be to figure out that the mandatory installation of a new government app will get citizens worried? And yet, the government did nothing to allay concerns in advance of the announcement; it now has to fall back on shabby crisis management.

 

   Secondly, one of the primary tenets of democratic governance is consultation. If you are going to demand that every phone carry your app, it might be worth discussing that move widely and inviting opinions from citizens before going ahead. If the government had done any of this, it could have avoided the mess it now finds itself in. Even phone manufacturers are saying that the mandatory installation of the app will be problematic.

 

 "India is a democracy. It thrives on consultation and consent. Forget that at your peril. Otherwise you end up with is the kind of shambolic crisis management that we are now seeing."

   Third, it is entirely possible that the government’s motives were benign. But the permissions the app requires go beyond simply outwitting scammers. The app “seeks permissions to access user’s calls and SMS logs, their photo gallery, access the camera app, and to make and manage phone calls and detect mobile numbers on the phone”.

 

   As the Indian Express notes, the app “lacks some elements that are considered industry standard for privacy protection. It has no explicit statement about user’s rights, does not allow users to request a correction or more importantly, deletion of their data”. Can anyone be surprised that citizens are worried?

 

   Fourth, the government has issued instructions to its loyal defenders to say that many common, commercial apps ask for even more information and access. This may or may not be true. But, the crucial distinction is one of consent. We choose to install these apps. On the contrary, the government’s app is mandatory. There is no concept of consent.

 

   Fifth, though the directive is quite clear that the app cannot be disabled or restricted, the government is now saying that the app is not mandatory after all. Which leads to the obvious question: if the government’s only motivation is the protection of citizens, then why not let the citizens choose whether to install the app? Why make it mandatory for phone manufacturers to install it on every phone?

 

   If you accept that the motivation for the app is to snoop on citizens, then most of these questions answer themselves. But, if on the other hand, you want to be fair and ascribe more benign motivations to the government, then it is hard to see why it has behaved in such a strange and undemocratic way.

 

   All of these mistakes and missteps should have been fairly self-evident to begin with, and it worries me that nobody in authority had the brains to anticipate the outrage that has dominated the public discourse in the last two days. It could be, as many have suggested, that the regime is now so used to getting its own way that it sees no need to bother with consultation or to explain its motives before it acts.

 

   If this is true, then the government is making a big mistake by taking the citizens of India for granted. It needs to look back no further than the experience with Aadhaar, which was preceded by months of consultations, with Nandan Nilekani travelling around the country and persuading Chief Ministers and Opposition leaders to see the need for such a system. And even then, Aadhar still has its opponents.

 

   India is a democracy. It thrives on consultation and consent. Forget that at your peril. Otherwise you end up with is the kind of shambolic crisis management that we are now seeing.

 

 

Posted On: 03 Dec 2025 01:17 PM
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