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Analysis: ID cards through the backdoor?

Wed Dec 03 02:04PM

There are many rules in politics. One, which has stood the test of time, is: 'If you can't convince someone of something, put it in a minor clause'.

There's every indication the Home Office intends to do that with ID cards today through the immigration and citizenship bill. It looks like rules allowing immigration officers or policemen to check you identity at ports of entry will be extended throughout the country.

There will be no law requiring you to produce a card, but the legislation would have the effect of making it necessary. How do they get away with it? Well, the rules would only apply to people who have entered the UK. So, as long as you've never left the country, you'll be fine. Feel free to laugh.

This is, in essence, a statement of intent. For some time now it appeared the government was backing down slightly on ID cards and the security agenda in general. The home secretary's promise to impose the cards on all airport workers shrivelled up into a pilot scheme for two airports last month. Private coroner's inquests and 42-day detention both bit the dust.

This morning, everything looks different. Private coroner's inquests will almost certainly be found nestling in the coroners and death investigation bill. ID cards in the immigration bill. Lie detector tests for benefit cheats are on the welfare reform agenda. It seems civil liberties activists, who yesterday thought they had had a relatively successful year, now have every reason to stay active.

The reason analysts are reading so much into this minor clause is because of how far it goes. At no point has anyone in government supporting ID cards admitted British citizens would be forced to provide them on demand in the street, but that is exactly what the clause would do. Refusing the demand could see you landed with a £500 fine or even a prison sentence of up to 51 weeks.

The response was instantaneous. "Sneaking in compulsory identity cards via the back door of immigration law is a cynical escalation of this expensive and intrusive scheme," said Liberty director Shami Chakrabarti.

Lib Dem home affairs spokesman Chris Huhne said: "Ministers seem to be breaking their promise that no one would ever have to carry an ID card. This is a sly and underhand way of extending the ID card scheme by stealth."

Tory immigration minister Damian Green - yes, that one - said: "This scheme will do nothing to improve our security, may make it worse, and will certainly land the taxpayer with a multi-million bill."

And that's not all. In their submission on the bill during consultation, campaign group No2ID highlighted several other ugly aspects.

"NO2ID believes the draft bill represents a massive change to common law rights and culture disguised as codification. It includes provisions which, if implemented, would have serious consequences not only for people from other countries living in or visiting the UK, but also British citizens," they told MPs.

Clause one of the bill makes entry to the UK wholly dependent on identification, rather than your British citizenship. Lose it, or have the government invalidate it, and you will find yourself in legal limbo.

"Though committee members might consider casual incompetence or fraud more likely, the effect for the individual would be the same," No2ID said.

If your documents fail - say because the microchip in the passport ceases to function - you could be deemed not to have entered the UK under clause 22. Suddenly you can be legally 'returned' to whichever country you were last in or held in an immigrant detention centre without remedy. This isn't as unlikely as you might think. The microchip in the new all-singing, all-dancing biometric passport has a two-year manufacturer's warranty. The passport is meant to last for ten.

This is what the Home Office had to say: "It is simply wrong to claim there are any plans whatsoever to make identity cards compulsory for British citizens or to require British citizens to have an ID card at all times and present it when asked. To maintain effective immigration control it is only right that we ask everyone attempting to enter the UK to produce a valid identity document."

The question is, do you believe them?

 
Ian Dunt

 

Comments31 - 40 of 84

  1. This Government will tell you anything to convince the public the need for ID card. They followed America to to Iraq for Oil but told the public they were going their to combat terrorism. The danger for collecting everybody's data on a single plastic is more than the benefit. The technology can be reproduced or copied. It is going to be a big waste of tax payers money. They will soon extend the ID card to all British citizen. Don't trust Labour Government, Don't trust un-elected labour MP.

    alagbaja.sombody From alagbaja.sombody on Wed Dec 03 04:12PM

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  2. I totally agree with I.D cards,people want security,the feeling of being safe in there own country yet don't want the bother of tighter security it might infringe on civil liberties,but death is forever some objectors should have lived in northern Ireland in the seventies,now that was inconveint for residents...

    rosemaryj62 From rosemaryj62 on Wed Dec 03 04:13PM

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  3. Where will it end? Will the ID card come in, albeit through the backdoor, only to be deemed too likely to be lost and therefore pressure applied to have a surgical implant instead? Suddenly conspiracy theories do not look so crazy. Afterall, Prince William has a microchip. What next, the Thought Police? Minority Report style via a microchip that can interact with the human brain? May be the stuff of science fiction but, hey, a few hundred year ago they thought the world was flat. Now we are in space. The future is closer than you think ;-)

    stannary_babe From stannary_babe on Wed Dec 03 04:14PM

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  4. apparently I don't exist as I don't drive, have no passport and have had my birth certificate and marriage licence stolen, they were in my bag to prove my id!!!!!!!!!

    s158taylor From s158taylor on Wed Dec 03 04:16PM

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  5. Personally I would welcome the ID cards, because if you are a law abiding citizen who is doing nothing wrong you should not have a problem about a police officers polite request to see your I.D. Which he is obviously doing in the interests of national security and law and order. To get yourselves whipped into a frenzy and start ranting of all things Orwellian and quite frankly all you achieve is to make yourselves look and sound like people with something to hide ... perhaps you are the 10% who abuse children or other such nastiness ... if you are a good citizen you will welcome it, I would.

    simon.j.lowe From simon.j.lowe on Wed Dec 03 04:16PM

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  6. Its not just ID Card.
    Look what all the bent, greedy politicians are doing to support the European Union (which we once thought as a trading partnership). Our once great country is being absorbed and made a small part of a super-state. Soon Britain will be just another region in the EU. Our fisheries are gone, our passports have gone. Soon our place in the world will disappear unless we leave EU. Changes our the constitution are carried out by stealth and deceit. Our law will be superceded by continental law and the Kaiser & Hitler will have won!!!

    vinnjb From vinnjb on Wed Dec 03 04:19PM

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  7. No, s158taylor, you DO exist - you are, apparently, an 'illegal'. How you are going to prove that you are who you say you are, is a hard one... when you are being held in a detention centre, until evidence of your identity is produced!

    iqueen1000 From iqueen1000 on Wed Dec 03 04:22PM

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  8. govt @#$%...nuff said

    jamesdean2002uk From jamesdean2002uk on Wed Dec 03 04:22PM

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  9. welcome to police state briton/ what next micro chipped at birth/do you know they wanted to finger print all new born children at 5 year intervals

    kevinthelead From kevinthelead on Wed Dec 03 04:27PM

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  10. I have been in the past a Victim of I.D. fraud and you can easily solve the inherent problem by telling the credit rating companies that they cannot authorise a card/loan/mortgage without you first supplying a fingerprint..

    It costs nothing and can be administered fairly painlessly...

    ID.cards is just another Big Brother Initiative from this ZaNuLabour Government that i have to admit I worked to have elected back in '97. What an Idiot I was...

    Never Never Again will I

    dmskinuk From dmskinuk on Wed Dec 03 04:27PM

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