The court issued a notice to the Centre and asked it to file a reply to the plea which claimed the policy of making Aadhaar card mandatory for applying for pre-matric, post- matric and merit-cum-means scholarships meant to benefit students from minority communities was "arbitrary".
"Why is this kind of instruction being issued? How can you (Centre) say that Aadhaar is mandatory? You take notice and the concerned officer shall file the reply by September 23," a bench of Chief Justice G Rohini and Justice Sangita Dhingra Sehgal said.
Challenging the constitutional validity of the need for Aadhaar card and applying online for the scholarships, the plea alleged that it was a violation of Supreme Court's judgement which had said that Aadhar would not be mandatory for availing benefits of government's welfare schemes.
The plea said that Muslims, Christians, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains and Zoroastrians (Parsis) have been notified as minority communities under Section 2(c) of the National Commission for Minorities Act, 1992.
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The petition, filed through advocates Prashant Bhushan and Neha Rathi, referred to the July 14, 2016 communication of the Ministry of Minority Affairs (MoMA) which had asked the chief secretary or administrators of the states to advertise for the various national scholarships of the ministry.
It said the letter had asked the states to make Aadhar card mandatory for all students to apply for scholarships and also to apply only through the online process.
"Such a rule forcing a student to apply only online and compulsorily submitting Aadhaar card is unconstitutional, arbitrary, unjust and violates Article 14 of Constitution," the plea said.
It has sought setting aside of the July 14 communication besides a direction to the government to allow students to apply for national scholarships through offline means.