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 Appeared in The Sunday Times - Britain.
David Cracknell, Political Editor
DAVID BLUNKETT has decided that everybody in
Britain over the age of 16 will have to buy an
identity card at nearly £40 each, a leaked cabinet
document reveals.
The move will spark outrage from Britain’s civil
liberties lobby, which has long campaigned against
ID cards. It is also likely to provoke anger among
voters, who will object to being forced to pay for
a new arm of state control.
The home secretary has rejected voluntary
“entitlement cards” and instead will require all
citizens to have identity cards. Each card will
contain biometric data, such as an image of a
person’s iris or fingerprint, so police and other
authorities can confirm the holder’s identity.
Although it will not be compulsory to carry the
card at all times, as in some countries, anybody
who is challenged may be required by police to
produce it within a few days.
People will be able to upgrade their passports or
driving licences to include the biometric data,
but will have to pay an extra charge.
The card will be free for retired people over 75,
for those on low incomes and for 16-year-olds.
Anybody receiving benefits or who is retired but
under 75 will pay £5. Everybody else will have to
pay £39 to cover the cost of the scheme.
The government will hold information about the
population on a central computer database — a move
that will further alarm civil liberties groups.
Blunkett wants to make an announcement to
parliament this month and intends to bring in
legislation later this year. His decision follows
a consultation exercise which found strong public
support for ID cards in the wake of terrorist
alerts after the September 11 terrorist attacks.
In a letter to fellow cabinet ministers dated June
25, Blunkett says: “I believe that the case for
introducing a universal identity card in the UK is
overwhelming. The consultation exercise showed
strong public support for a card scheme and a
preference for the term ‘identity card’ rather
than ‘entitlement card’.”
He adds: “The argument that identity cards will
inhibit our freedoms is wrong. We are strengthened
in our liberty if our identity is protected from
theft; if we are able to access the services we
are entitled to; and if our community is better
protected from terrorists and organised criminals.
“There is a highly organised minority who will
campaign vocally against a scheme. However, the
identity card I am proposing would not be used to
store large amounts of personal data to which
government departments or agencies would have
unfettered access.
“There will be strict limits on what is held on
the card, and what information different agencies
can access via the card and the central database.
Privacy will be protected, as it is in other
advanced democracies that have identity cards.
“Nor will it be compulsory for people to carry a
card, though as now with driving licences, the
police or other agencies could require its
production as a secure proof of identity in
strictly defined circumstances. It will be
important to reinforce these messages continually
during the debate on legislation.”
Blunkett explains he has already discussed the
cost of the scheme with the Treasury, saying that
without the exemptions each person would pay £33.
“This would bring the cost for the rest of the
population to around £39 if the free and
discounted cards were not funded out of general
taxation.”
Blunkett’s letter is officially addressed to John
Prescott, the deputy prime minister, as chairman
of the domestic affairs cabinet committee.
Many other countries have some form of identity
card and Blunkett says in his letter that Britain
is “out of kilter with Europe”. Eleven European
Union member states have cards and in Germany,
Spain, Greece and Belgium they are compulsory.
From next year travellers to the United States
will have to have biometric data on their
passports if they are arriving on a long-stay
non-tourist visa.
Blunkett met Tony Blair in Downing Street last
week to discuss the scheme. The prime minister is
understood to support it but wants more details.
“David always gets his way with Tony,” said a
Whitehall source.

July 6, 2003.
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