You are here: silicon.com > Public Sector > News

"We must not allow ourselves to become a Big Brother society"

Tories slam gov't for e-Borders data retention scheme

Tags: e-borders, data

By Tom Espiner

Published: 10 February 2009 09:09 GMT

Both the Conservative and Liberal Democrat parties have attacked the UK government over the retention of travel data.

The government plans to retain all travel data for everyone entering and leaving the country in a centralised database for 10 years, and is in the process of updating a centre near Manchester to process the data, the Home Office said on Monday.

UK border and immigration minister Phil Woolas said in a statement: "Our hi-tech electronic borders system will allow us to count all passengers in and out of the UK and targets those who aren't willing to play by our rules.

"Already e-Borders has screened over 75 million passengers against immigration, customs and police watch-lists, leading to over 2,700 arrests for crimes such as murder, rape and assault."

Retained information will include the passenger name, date, method of payment and place of ticket issue. The e-Borders Operations Centre at Wythenshawe near Manchester, which was previously called the Joint Border Operations Centre, has been collecting passenger information since October 2008. The centre will, by July, be able to fully track passenger movements. By the end of 2009, details of all passengers and crew entering and leaving the UK will be recorded.

The centre will be run by the UK Identity and Passport Service, with input from HMRC, MI5, MI6, the Serious Organised Crime Agency and the police.

The Home Office insisted that the information collated would be used to track serious criminals and not used for actions such as catching benefit cheats. However, the Conservative party said the civil liberties of ordinary UK citizens were being gradually eroded by the increasing collection and collation of data by the government.

Shadow home secretary Chris Grayling said in a statement: "Everywhere that you look right now, the government seems to be building databases to track more and more of our lives.

"The justification is always about security or personal protection - but in a nation where we now have anti-terror laws being used by local councils to watch out for parents breaking the rules on school admissions, the truth is that we have a government that just can't be trusted over these highly sensitive issues. We must not allow ourselves to become a Big Brother society."

The Liberal Democrats said the e-Borders scheme was "another example of an intrusive database without any public debate about safeguards on its use".

Liberal Democrat shadow home secretary, Chris Huhne, said in a statement: "We are sleepwalking into a surveillance state and should remember that George Orwell's 1984 was a warning, not a blueprint."

Privacy campaigner Phil Booth, director of the No2ID group, said his organisation was "extremely concerned" by both the e-Borders database and other centralised government databases.

"They're building a dossier on anyone who decides to travel," Booth told silicon.com sister site ZDNet UK. "We have always said the government is passing a heck of a lot of information ahead of you in the form of passenger-name records. They have been collecting and collating this information - now they will retain it."

Booth said the National Identity Register (the database behind the National Identity Scheme), the ContactPoint child database, the NHS central care records system, the e-Borders database, automatic number-plate recognition systems and the DNA database all caused his organisation concern.

Original article: Gov't faces backlash over e-Borders travel database from ZDNet UK

  1. Zones
  2. Management
  3. Networks
  4. Software
  5. IT Services
  6. Hardware
  1. Verticals
  2. Public Sector
  3. Financial Services
  4. Retail & Leisure

silicon.com Public Sector
Get the latest public sector news straight to your inbox. Sign up for the PS newsletter today!


  • Jobs
Project Manager

The e-Borders scope of work is at the forefront of the UK Government's Border Transformation Programme, and will herald a new era of border ...

Publishing manager - Weeky Publication - London

You should make yourself aware of how immigration laws apply to your situation before applying for any jobs. The understanding of Digital and new ...

Principle Consultant - Identity Management

Principle Consultant - Identity Management - London. Existing Information Assurance department of a market leader in information security currently ...

Nick Heath
Let's shine a light into the public sector IT money pit
With £16bn being spent, why is productivity still falling?

Tim Ferguson
BBC is taking tech seriously, so give it a break!
Auntie is the envy of the world but doesn't get the credit it deserves at home...

Peter Cochrane
Peter Cochrane's Blog: Open info for all?
Government stonewalling citizens

Nick Heath
Home Office CIO on taming tech and why ID cards are good news
Interview: Annette Vernon, Home Office CIO

Nick Heath
NHS records, Google and Microsoft: Where do you want your data?
Politicians: Heal thyself

Alan Hunt
NHS network: Time to get secure
Patient data in need of a check up

Agenda Setters 2009
Welcome to the ninth annual Agenda Setters poll – silicon.com's list of the top 50 most influential individuals in the technology and IT industries, from techies and CIOs to entrepreneurs and business leaders. Find out more in our latest special report.




Quick Sitemap Links: