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Westminster committee criticises Government on data protection Print E-mail
Friday, 14 March 2008

Repeated losses of personal data are "symptomatic of the Government’s persistent failure to take data protection safeguards sufficiently seriously", according to a report released today by the Joint Select Committee on Human Rights. 

Setting out detailed rules and requirements in primary legislation would help ensure that data protection becomes a primary concern of managers and front-line staff in the public sector, the Committee said.

Members of the Committee said that expressed concern that recent breaches in data security do not inspire confidence about the proposed National Identity Register. The Committee said it will closely scrutinise the detailed plans for the register as they emerge, as well as the outcome of the various current reviews of data protection legislation and practice.

Committee chair Andrew Dismore MP said: "People were shocked by the recent loss of child benefit data but that was far from a one-off. In fact, it was symptomatic of lax standards in the public sector. Information should be treated as sensitively and carefully as hard cash. It should not be sent in the post unregistered and unencrypted. It has taken the massive data loss by HMRC to bring the true consequences of the piecemeal approach to data management to light. The Government must demonstrate that it appreciates the seriousness of what needs to be done.

"The fundamental problem is a cultural one. There has been a  rapid increase in the amount of data sharing in the public sector, which can be useful, important and necessary. But this has not been matched the even more necessary strong commitment to safeguard the right to respect for personal data."

The Committee reminded Government that the right to respect for private life in Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights and the Human Rights Act obliges the Government to provide adequate protection for personal data and information. 

It pointed out 18 previous occasions on which it had expressed concerns about data protection provision in Government Bills, including the Commissioners for Revenue and Customs Bill in 2005, where it flagged up  the "inadequacy of safeguards relating to HMRC information sharing powers".
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