By Nick Heath, 13 March 2008 13:05
NEWS
The Ministry of Defence (MoD) has admitted that more than 11,000 military ID cards have been lost or stolen in the past two years.
Defence minister Bob Ainsworth admitted that 4,433 ID cards disappeared in 2006 and a further 6,812 went missing from July 2006 to December 2007.
He revealed the loss in a written answer to Parliament in response to a question by shadow defence secretary Dr Liam Fox.
The revelation prompted condemnation from opposition parties who said that it made a mockery of security procedures at military facilities and showed a scandalous disregard for the security of British citizens.
In a statement, the MoD said: "We take the loss of military ID cards very seriously and we are taking steps to improve general security awareness. Military ID cards form one part of the security measures we have in place. They have photographic ID on them, so it would be difficult for them to be used by individuals they have not been assigned to."
silicon.com's Full Disclosure campaign - what we are asking for...
silicon.com wants the government to review its data protection legislation and improve the reporting of information security breaches in the public and private sectors.
We are calling for greater public debate and for the government to consider legislation that would require organisations that suffer information security breaches to alert their customers if there is a chance the breach has put individuals' sensitive personal data at risk.
We want to hear your views about this campaign and the issues it raises. Make your voice heard by leaving a Reader Comment below or emailing us at editorial@silicon.com.
The government has suffered many data security breaches over the past five months, including the MoD having three laptops stolen containing approximately 600,000 servicemen's and recruits' details, the NHS losing hundreds of thousands of patient records, the DVLA losing three million learner drivers' details and the HMRC losing 25 million child benefit details.


Comments
There are 2 comments. Join the discussion
1. Karen Challinor
it seems even the military who are usually very good at professionally keeping secrets can't guarantee to keep ID cards safe
so what chance for the rest of us when the bunch of amateurs we call HMG get their hands on our data and issue us with ID cards ?
and the government is still trying to block the release of the gateway reviews of the project nearly four years after their publication claiming "parliamentary privilege" a law designed to prevent MP's from being prosecuted for remarks made in parliament
the question is why are they persisting with this suppression ?
2. anonymous
Ha ha ha!
HA ha ha ha ha ha ha!
HA ha ha ha ha ha ha!
HA ha ha ha ha ha ha!HA ha ha ha ha ha ha!
HA ha ha ha ha ha ha!HA ha ha ha ha ha ha!
HA ha ha ha ha ha ha!HA ha ha ha ha ha ha!HA ha ha ha ha ha ha!HA ha ha ha ha ha ha!HA ha ha ha ha ha ha!HA ha ha ha ha ha ha!