10,000 UK passports issued to fraudsters and terrorists
By Rene Millman,
Ten thousand passports were fraudulently obtained by criminals, the Home Office admitted. The department is to set in motion new plans to crack down on abuses of the system.
The Home Office said that of the 6m passports applied for last year 16,500 were fraudulent. Of those 6,500 were detected by the Identity and Passport Service (IPS), while the other 10,000 got through.
Worryingly, nine passports were issued to Dhiren Barot, who received a life sentence in 2006 for plotting to kill tube travellers with a "dirty" bomb. He had successfully obtained seven passports in his name and another two using fraudulent IDs.
Another two passports were issued to Salaheddine Benyaich, a Moroccan man in prison for 18 years for his part in the 2003 Casablanca bombings, which claimed 44 lives.
From May, new passport applicants must attend a personal interview at which they will have to prove their identity. Applicants will be asked questions about their family and financial history as well as addresses where they have lived.
Tory shadow Home Secretary David Davis said that it was outrageous that the government managed to issue passports to convicted terrorists. "This undermines the government's case for their expensive ID card system."
"What is to say they won't issue genuine ID cards to terrorists or that terrorists will not use fraudulent passports to obtain genuine ID cards?" he said.
Security experts said the real focus should be on the quality of information officials have to make good decisions over whether to issue passports.
"It is highly likely that a significant proportion of these errors can be put down to poor collaboration across departments," said Tim Holyoake, senior consultant at software firm Software AG. "The information needed to improve decision making is often available, but officials don't have the ability to easily cross-reference."
He said that technology exists to make information sharing easier now as well as in future, as priorities change and this would lead to better decision-making as a direct consequence.
"This problem needs to be addressed now, with focus on ensuring the existing systems and processes make full use of the information available, before a simple information oversight escalates into a national disaster," said Holyoake.
You may also like...
Sponsored Links
advertisement
You may also like...
Latest Security Analysis & Insight
What is your password worth?
Would you be tempted to sell off company passwords for a fee? If not, seems like you're in the minority, acccording to research.
- Macs under attack?
- Intel: security inside
- Are you spending too much on IT security?
- Does the government want to snoop on your data?
- Eurocrats versus the cyber criminals
- The truth about spam
- Google and privacy: What’s the problem?
- Q&A: Symantec’s CISO on the source code hack
- RSA: Back from the breach?
Latest Security Reviews
Check Point 2210 Appliance review
Rating: ![]()
advertisement
Most popular
- Apple iPad 3 vs iPad 2 head-to-head review
- Hutchison denies it will pull plug on Three UK
- EMC World 2012: Tucci declares Documentum is here to stay
- ICO: Fines for cookie law breakers
- EMC World 2012: EMC talks up cloud, security and big data
- Dell PowerEdge R820 review
- Sony Vaio T13 Ultrabook review: First look
- BlackBerry 7 OS certified to carry 'Restricted' UK government information
- Facebook floatation marred by Nasdaq glitch
- CIO: Career is over?
Latest News Videos in Security
IT PRO Podcast: Are UK data protection laws flawed?
We bring in two experts to talk about the problems with UK data protection law and the way it is managed.
Register for IT PRO
You'll get exclusive member benefits including free whitepapers, downloads, Webinars and weekly newsletters full of the latest IT PRO news, reviews, insight and expertise.





