| Relevance: GS-II Governance & Rights · GS-III Tech in Policing & Internal Security | Source: Abhigyan app launch, June 2026 |
1 · What happened
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On 19 June 2026, Union Home Minister Amit Shah launched the Abhigyan app, built by the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB). With a handheld scanner, a police officer can now take a person’s thumb impression on the street and pull up their full criminal history on a phone in about 35 seconds. It connects to a national fingerprint database of about 1.29 crore accused persons and convicts. The promise is faster policing; the worry is what it means for ordinary citizens’ privacy. |
2 · How it works
| Think of it as an app + a database. Abhigyan is the mobile app on the officer’s phone. Behind it sits NAFIS (the National Automated Fingerprint Identification System) — NCRB’s central store of fingerprints of accused persons, convicts and prisoners. The app simply lets officers tap into NAFIS from anywhere. |
- The big shift: earlier, prints could only be matched at fixed terminals in police stations. Now the check moves to the field, secured with two-step login.
- What it covers: the database also holds specialised records (such as narcotics and human-trafficking offenders) and prison logs — though Shah noted NAFIS is still used at only about 10% of its potential.
3 · The promise and the problem
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The gain
Speed & reach
Instant identification anywhere helps catch repeat offenders and fugitives who hide by moving across states or changing their appearance.
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The basis
The law behind it
The Criminal Procedure (Identification) Act, 2022 is the legal foundation. It replaced the old Identification of Prisoners Act, 1920.
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The limit
Only for the accused
Section 3 of the Act allows taking fingerprints only from those arrested, convicted, or ordered to keep the peace — not from everyone.
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The gap
Random street checks?
The Act does not clearly allow scanning random citizens during routine stops. Doing so risks arbitrary checks and harassment.
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4 · The constitutional lens
- Right to privacy: in K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017), the Supreme Court made privacy a fundamental right under Article 21. Any data collection must pass a three-part test — legality (a clear law), need (a genuine state aim), and proportionality (the least intrusive method).
- Self-incrimination: Article 20(3) protects you from being forced to witness against yourself. But in Kathi Kalu Oghad (1961), the Court held that giving fingerprints is not “witnessing against oneself” — so it does not violate Article 20(3).
| UPSC Value Box | ||||||||||||||
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| MCQ Practice Question |
Q. With reference to the legal and constitutional framework for biometric identification in India, consider the following statements:
Which of the statements given above is/are correct? |
Answer: (a) 1 and 2 only
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