DOES ARTICLE 21 INCLUDE THE RIGHT TO DIGITAL ACCESS?
DOES ARTICLE 21 INCLUDE THE RIGHT TO DIGITAL ACCESS?
Supreme Court affirms accessibility as a fundamental right for persons with disabilities
BACKGROUND: SUPREME COURT’S LANDMARK RULING
- Date: April 30, 2024
- Issue: Inaccessibility of digital KYC processes for persons with disabilities (PwDs)
- Ruling: Supreme Court reinterprets Article 21 (Right to Life and Liberty) to include the Right to Digital Access
- Directive: Ordered revision of KYC norms to ensure inclusivity for PwDs
WHAT LEGAL FRAMEWORK PROTECTS PWDS?
Constitutional Backing
- Preamble, Fundamental Rights, and Directive Principles protect rights of PwDs.
- India is a signatory to the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD).
RPwD Act, 2016
- Adopts a social-barrier approach to disability.
- Defines disability as arising not just from impairments, but also social, physical, and psychological barriers.
- Section 42 mandates:
- Accessibility in audio, print, and electronic media
- Use of universal design principles for digital interfaces
WHY IS KYC VERIFICATION MANDATORY?
- Required under Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002
- Ensures:
- Identity verification
- Prevention of financial fraud
- Covers access to:
- Bank accounts
- SIM cards
- Government subsidies
- Insurance and pension schemes
Digital KYC (V-CIP) Methods Include:
- Selfie-based verification
- OTP verification
- Reading randomly generated codes
- Digital signature and scanned form uploads
CHALLENGES FACED BY PWDS IN DIGITAL KYC
Exclusion of Visually Impaired and Acid-Attack Survivors
- Current video-KYC requirements are not disability-friendly
- Facial recognition and code reading exclude:
- Blind users
- Users with facial disfigurement
Lack of Accessibility Features
- Apps and websites do not comply with ICT Accessibility Standards (2021, 2022)
- No screen-reader prompts or audio cues
- No support for:
- Thumb impressions
- Aadhaar biometric alternatives
- RBI prohibits prompting during verification — leading to failed KYC attempts
SUPREME COURT’S KEY OBSERVATIONS
Accessibility as a Constitutional Right
- Referenced the Rajive Raturi v. Union of India (2024) case
- Held that accessibility is intrinsic to:
- Dignity and freedom under Article 21
- Equality under Articles 14 and 15
Right to Digital Access
- Recognised digital infrastructure as a critical public utility
- Barriers to digital access violate:
- RPwD Act
- UNCRPD
- Digital divide affects:
- PwDs
- Rural populations
- Elderly
- Economically weak
- Linguistic minorities
COURT’S DIRECTIVE
- Mandated revision of digital KYC norms to ensure:
- Inclusivity
- Accessibility by design
- Emphasised the principle of substantive equality
- Urged the state to treat digital access as inseparable from life and liberty
CONCLUSION: A DIGITAL RIGHTS MILESTONE
This verdict marks a significant step toward digital justice and redefines the digital landscape as a fundamental space for rights, participation, and inclusion. The court has made it clear: digital exclusion is a rights violation.
QUESTIONS
- Discuss the significance of the Supreme Court’s ruling on April 30, 2024, regarding the reinterpretation of Article 21 to include the Right to Digital Access for persons with disabilities.
- Analyze the challenges faced by persons with disabilities in digital Know Your Customer (KYC) verification processes and the Supreme Court’s directives to address these issues.