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| Liberty Urges Lords to strike down ID Card Bill15 Nov 2005 As the House of Lords prepares for the report stage of the Government’s controversial ID Card Bill, Shami Chakrabarti, Director of Liberty, said:
“Whether the true cost will be 4 billion or 40 billion pounds, the money for ID cards would be far better spent on direct operational intelligence and policing.
Providing more resources for police will have a direct impact on crime levels rather than the insubstantial promises of enhanced policing through the creation of a national register.
The riots in France hold a chilling lesson for the Government of the poisonous influence that ID cards and similar policies can have on race relations.”
Liberty Press Office on 020 7378 3656 or 07973 831 128
Notes to Editors Our principle concerns: They will fundamentally change the relationship between individual and state.
They will have a detrimental impact on race relations and will adversely affect vulnerable groups in society.
They will intrude on privacy as the amount of information held on the database and the uses made of that information will increase dramatically.
The Government’s poor record on IT projects makes this a huge financial risk. We do not accept that ID cards will have any particular benefit: Arguments that they will protect the UK from terrorist attack are unconvincing. The men responsible for the 9/11 and Madrid terrorist attacks had valid identification.
They will not help fight crime but will be counterproductive, as they will deflect financial and policing resources away from crime prevention and detection.
They will have minimal impact on benefit fraud, as this is usually about financial circumstances rather than identity.
Most identity fraud takes place remotely, online, over the phone or using false ‘seed’ documents (driving licences, passports and so on). Identity cards will not address this.
They will have no impact on illegal immigration as asylum seekers have been required to carry ID cards since 2000.
The Identity Cards Bill is flawed: Too much detail is retained for regulation.
‘Safeguards’ protecting against the need to carry cards fall away when the cards become compulsory.
Criminal and civil penalties are excessive.
There is no auditing process to ensure information is accurate.
Information sharing powers are too broad.
The Identity Card Commissioner has insufficient power. ENDS//
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