Organized crime 'will attack ID cards database'

By Steve Ranger, Special to ZDNet Asia
Thursday, May 18, 2006 11:39 AM

Organized crime will try and crack the U.K. identity cards database--the National Identity Register (NIR)--the country's Liberal Democrats have warned.

Last year it was revealed that the identities of 13,000 civil servants had been stolen and used by criminals to make fake tax credit claims.

Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesperson, Nick Clegg, said the theft was a "terrible omen" for the forthcoming ID cards scheme.

Clegg said, if organized criminals are capable of infiltrating the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP), "it is clear they will target the identity cards database where the stakes are even higher".

Clegg said in a statement: "The government's claims that ID cards will cut identity fraud look increasingly unrealistic. If the ID cards database is breached, people could find their iris scans and fingerprints--as well as personal data and national insurance numbers--stolen."

He said the government must urgently review how the DWP thefts happened and whether it will be possible to secure the NIR against similar attacks.

It was reported in The Times this week that more than 300,000 foreigners are given national insurance numbers every year with few checks on their status.


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