IDENTITY
CARDS BILL RECEIVES ROYAL ASSENT
(30 March 2006)
The
Identity Cards Bill received Royal Assent, placing on the statute
book important measures which will help Britain meet the challenges
of the 21st century the Government stated today. The National Identity
Scheme will provide all UK residents aged over 16 with a universal,
highly secure means for safeguarding their identity at a cost of
about £93, payable by the individual. But the penalties for
not complying are severe too. The failure to register will be punished
by a maximum fine of £2,500. The failure to apply in a manner
prescribed to renew your ID, or to inform the national identity
register of a change of your details, or to surrender the ID card,
or to notify the register of an invalid card, will all incur a maximum
fine of £1,000.
The
Government has also established a new agency to issue ID Cards.
The new agency that will issue passports and ID cards will be called
the Identity and Passport Service (IPS). Incorporating the United
Kingdom Passport Service (UKPS) and working closely with the Home
Office's Immigration and Nationality Directorate, it will become
operational on 1 April 2006.
The
Home Secretary Charles Clarke, said: "Being able to prove who
we are is a fundamental requirement in modern society. Building
on the experience and proven excellence of the Passport Service,
the IPS will ensure the UK is at the forefront of the worldwide
drive to increase document security, safeguard borders and protect
identities for use by those who are entitled to them.
"I
believe that the National Identity Scheme will bring major benefits.
It will give UK residents an easy and convenient way to prove their
identity; deter illegal immigration and illegal working; help tackle
organised crime and terrorism; and provide a means to defend against
the abuse of public services. At the heart of the scheme, a secure
national database linking basic personal details to unique biometric
information will strengthen, not erode, civil liberties by protecting
individual identities."
The
National Identity Scheme, to be phased in over a number of years,
will link basic personal information, such as name and address,
to secure biometrics - a computer image of a person's iris, face
or fingerprints. These are unique and provide a hi-tech form of
security for every citizen.
The
new agency will be responsible for:
*
issuing passports and providing passport services;
*
issuing ID cards and providing the means of verifying the identity
of individuals for accredited organisations;
*
delivering the National Identity Scheme including the establishment
of the National Identity Register; and
*
promoting the use of the National Identity Scheme across the public
and private sectors to improve identity management and ensure
full realisation of the benefits of the scheme.
It
will not be compulsory to carry a card and there will be no new
powers for police to demand to see a card. However, this would be
a universal scheme for everyone legally resident in the UK and,
subject to further primary legislation, it will be compulsory to
register on the scheme.
ID
COMPROMISE IMPOSES COMPULSORY REGISTRATION
The
Act includes an opt-out which means that until 1 January 2010, people
applying for or renewing a passport can choose not to get an ID
card, although their details will be entered on the National Identity
Register. Opponents of the ID Card Scheme expressed outrage at the
compromise agreed between the Government and the House of Lords
on this issue on 29 March 2006. Phil Booth, NO2ID’s National Coordinator,
said: “Anybody who thinks that this is compromise has not understood
the Bill. The problem has always been the database, not the card."
“In
Parliament round one may have gone to the government by misdirection,
but in the country it’s a different story. Millions are already
vehemently opposed, the Home Office will have to round them up and
force them to be fingerprinted which will bring home to the public
the true nature of the scheme. This is a self-destructive policy
to dwarf the Poll Tax. The Government may think it has won but NO2ID
has only just begun to fight.”
There
are currently around 47 million British passports in circulation,
with 80% of the population holding a passport. The number of applications
is expected to rise to around 7 million in 2006. With the exception
of the USA (8 million) this is more than any other country in the
world. The UKPS will have processed a record 6.6 million passport
applications in the financial 2005/06.
OPPONENTS
DEBUNK ID CARD CLAIMS
Civil
liberty and privacy campaigners have also challenged Mr Clarke's
claims that compulsory ID cards would be "a major breakthrough"
in tackling identity fraud, the cost of which they announced has
risen from £1.3 to £1.7 billion. New evidence reveals that the Government’s
planned ID card will expose citizens to even greater risk of having
their personal data stolen and could fuel a massive increase in
identity fraud.
The
NO2ID campaign issued a warning after the security of the Dutch
biometric passport, which uses the same RFID technology as intended
for UK ID cards, was cracked using data ‘skimmed’ from a distance
of around 10 metres.
Phil
Booth, NO2ID’s National Coordinator said: “Identity fraud will be
made much worse by ID cards, not better. Numbering and indexing
every person in the country on a huge central Register, then making
us use cards designed to broadcast not only this number but our
personal data, including our biometrics, will be an absolute bonanza
for identity thieves and fraudsters.”
Jerry
Fishenden, Microsoft’s National Technology Officer said: “We should
not be building systems that allow hackers to mine information so
easily. Inappropriate technology design could provide new hi-tech
ways of perpetrating massive identity fraud on a scale beyond anything
we have seen before.”
Home
Secretary Charles Clarke hailed the bill as a “sensible and acceptable
compromise”. But Shadow Home Secretary David Davis vowed that if
the Tories win the next election his first act as Home Secretary
would be “to do away with this Bill”. Lib Dem MP Nick Clegg said
the Bill would “erode privacy, curtail freedom and cost an extraordinary
amount”. He added: “It is a monstrous expansion of big, big government.”
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