Military Police are conducting an urgent investigation into the loss of a
hard drive believed to contain the personal details of up to 100,000 serving
armed forces personnel, as MPs demanded a "cultural change" in the way Whitehall
treats personal information.
The call followed the disclosure that Ministry of Defence (MoD) subcontractor
EDS could not account for the whereabouts of the portable drive, which could
contain passport numbers, dates of birth, names of next of kin and driving
licence details as well as names and addresses.
A spokesman for prime minister Gordon Brown confirmed the investigation and
described what had happened as "regrettable".
There was no comment on any implications for the government's ID card system,
which faces increased political challenges following a series of government data
handling blunders.
New defence secretary John Hutton is reported to have called for an
examination of EDS' contract to see how it covers this type of breach of trust.
Tory shadow defence secretary Liam Fox said that the incident underlined the
MoD's poor record in keeping sensitive and classified material secure.
"The loss of so much confidential information shows the reckless approach
this government takes with our personal information," he said.
Tory MP Nigel Evans, chairman of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on
Identity Fraud, said it was ironic that the loss was revealed during
National
Identity Fraud Prevention Week.
The loss of the type of data believed to be missing "will be music to the
ears of fraudsters everywhere", he said.
"It is vital there is a cultural change across the public sector with all
professionals aware of their responsibility to protect and manage personal data,
" added Evans.
SNP defence spokesman Angus Robertson said it was "extraordinary that the MoD
could allow this to happen again" on top of the loss of data on more than
500,000 potential recruits and their families, which was stored unencrypted on a
laptop in a Royal Naval officer's car.
The MoD said it was informed on Wednesday by EDS that it was unable to
account for a portable hard drive used in connection with the administration of
armed forces personnel data. The loss was revealed by an audit the company was
performing in compliance with the
Cabinet
Office data handling review.
Other recent data losses include four laptops containing details of more than
100 bankrupt company directors from the
Insolvency
Service in Manchester, details of nearly 18,000 current and former staff at
Whittington NHS hospital by a firm providing payroll services, and a computer
containing details of 5,000 prison and offender management staff, also by EDS.
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