MEDIA RELEASE
RESEARCH WARNS THAT GOVERNMENT IDENTITY CARDS WILL BE A
GIFT TO CRIMINALS
Privacy watchdog warns that plans to introduce cards will be exploited
by criminal syndicates
3rd July 2002
For immediate release
The Government's plan to introduce a national ID card, the consultation
for which is scheduled for Parliamentary announcement today (3rd July) will
compound problems of illegal immigration, fraud and identity theft.
Privacy International, a global privacy and technology watchdog, has for
the past twelve years studied the implications of ID cards worldwide. It
today issued a warning to the UK government that any national ID card - whether
voluntary or mandatory - will create new opportunities for criminal
syndicates and corrupt officials to increase by several magnitudes the problem
of false ID in the United Kingdom.
Privacy International's research into the implications of national identity
cards has established that these initiatives have no effect on the reduction
of crime or fraud, but introduce additional problems of discrimination,
criminal false identity and administrative chaos.
Privacy International's Director, Simon Davies, warned "The technology
gap between governments and organised crime has now narrowed to such an
extent that even the most highly secure cards are available as blanks weeks
after their introduction. Criminals and terrorists can in reality move more
freely and more safely with several fake "official" identities than they
ever could in a country using multiple forms of "low-value" ID such as a
birth certificate."
Criminal use of fake identity documents does not necessarily involve the
use of counterfeiting techniques. In 1999, a former accountant was charged
with obtaining up to 500 UK passports under false identities. The scam was
merely a manipulation of the primary documentation procedure. This situation,
warns Privacy International, will extend to ID cards.
Mr Davies added: "the ramifications of an ID card conform to the dynamics
of the black market economy. Whenever governments attempt to introduce an
ID card, it is always based on the aim of eliminating false identity. The
higher the stated "integrity" (infallibility) of a card, the greater is
its value to criminals and illegal immigrants. A high-value card attracts
substantially larger investment in corruption and counterfeit activity.
The equation is simple: higher value ID equals greater criminal activity."
The government says a national ID card will combat the growing problem
of identity theft, in which a person's identity is fraudulently acquired
for criminal purposes. It is a huge problem in the US, made all the worse
because of the ubiquitous Social Security Number. Critics of national ID
proposals in the US have warned that any central ID number massively increases
the incidence of identity theft. Privacy International supports this view,
and predicts that any national ID system will increase identity theft in
the UK to US proportions.
Privacy International believes that the proposal for a national identity
card has little to do with the government's stated objectives of reducing
the threat of crime, terrorism and illegal immigration. Rather, the plan
is part of a broader objective outlined in the Cabinet Office report "Privacy
& Data Sharing" to create a new administrative basis for the linkage
of government databases and information systems.
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NOTES TO EDITORS
- Privacy International (PI) is a human rights group formed in 1990 as
a watchdog on surveillance by governments and corporations. PI is based
in London, and has an office in Washington, D.C. Together with members
in 40 countries, PI has conducted campaigns throughout the world on issues
ranging from wiretapping and national security activities, to ID cards, video
surveillance, data matching, police information systems, and medical privacy,
and works with a wide range of parliamentary and inter-governmental organisations
such as the European Parliament, the House of Lords and UNESCO.
- PI's website is www.privacyinternational.org It contains an extensive
resource in the "issues" page on identity cards.