Home Secretary John Reid has announced that the government is no longer
planning to build a new database for the national ID card scheme, but will rely
on data sharing with existing systems.
The news was announced hours before Parliament rose for the Christmas break
and was buried in the
official
report. It now seems that every government system could be accessed in a
major data sharing programme.
"The report exposes this scheme as a massive data sharing programme, which is
very different from what the public were sold by David Blunkett," said Phil
Booth, national coordinator of the
NO2ID
campaign group, which seeks to stop the scheme.
"Now they are talking about sucking in data from loads of databases, which opens
up huge security problems and could make the private information stored
accessible by far more people."
Booth explained that
Home
Office systems will store the cards' biometric information, the
Department
for Work and Pensions will hold biographical details, and the
Identity
and Passport Service will hold administrative details.
However, all other government systems could be accessible, meaning worse
security and making it much harder to control who can access the information.
Reid denied that the decision was a U-turn, maintaining that it was sensible
policy that would save money.
"Doing something sensible is not necessarily a U-turn," said Reid. "We have
decided that it is lower risk, more efficient and faster to take the
infrastructure that already exists, although the data will be drawn from other
sources."
So far the scheme is expected to cost over £5bn but the government expects to
recoup some of this money by charging people to have the card.
The scheme will require every person in the country to travel to a biometrics
centre to have their personal data stored or face a £2,500 fine and possible
jail term.
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