‘DNA profiles won’t be kept permanently’

Why it is in news?
  • India’s proposed DNA databank, to be used during investigation into crimes or to find missing persons, will not permanently store details of people.
  • The DNA details will be removed, subject to judicial orders.
  • For instance, if there’s a criminal case, till the case is solved the DNA profile will remain in the bank. It will be removed after a judicial order
  • These things will be specified in the rules.
Background
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  • The rules will come after Parliament approves the DNA Technology (Use and Application) Regulation Bill, 2018, the latest version of the DNA ‘profiling’ Bill framed by the Department of Biotechnology in 2015.
  • The aim of that draft legislation was to establish an institutional mechanism to collect and deploy DNA technologies to identify persons based on samples collected from crime scenes or to identify missing persons.
  • The Bill envisages a DNA Profiling Board and a DNA Data Bank.
  • To help investigations, there would be a central databank as well as regional ones, and these would store DNA profiles under various heads, such as a ‘crime scene index’ or ‘suspects index’ or ‘offenders index.’
  • A moot point was whether the databanks were secure enough to protect the privacy of those from whom DNA details were collected.
  • It also deliberated on how, and who were authorised, to collect such information.
Regulatory authority
  • The 11-member Board, according to the proposed legislation, is supposed to be the regulatory authority that will grant accreditation to DNA laboratories.
  • An important thing that the Bill achieves is to ensure that private laboratories don’t proliferate and work without scientific validation.
  • It will be a full-time Board and chaired by the Secretary.
  • The Board, in consultation with members of the judiciary, will frame rules on how long the DNA details of an entrant on a crime index would be maintained.
  • Countries follow different rules.
  • In France, the profiles of convicted persons are kept for 40 years after conviction.
  • Upon their 80th birthday, suspects’ profiles are removed by a motion of the prosecutor or the individual on the grounds that their storage no longer serves its original purpose.
Source

The Hindu




Posted by Jawwad Kazi on 14th Jul 2018