Thousands of Afghans win asylum in Britain after huge data breach
British Defence Minister John Healey unveiled the scheme to Parliament, after the UK High Court on July 15 lifted a gag order that had banned any reporting of the 2022 data breach.
LONDON - Thousands of Afghans who worked with the UK and their families were brought to Britain in a secret programme after a 2022 data breach put their lives at risk, the British government revealed on July 15.
Defence Minister John Healey unveiled the scheme to Parliament after the UK High Court on July 15 lifted a super-gag order banning any reporting of the events.
In February 2022, a spreadsheet containing the names and details of almost 19,000 Afghans who had asked to be relocated to Britain was accidentally leaked by a UK official just six months after Taliban fighters seized Kabul, Mr Healey said.
'This was a serious departmental error,' Mr Healey said, adding: 'Lives may have been at stake.'
The previous Conservative government put in place a secret programme in April 2024 to help those 'judged to be at the highest risk of reprisals by the Taliban', he said.
Some 900 Afghans and 3,600 family members have now been brought to Britain or are in transit under the programme known as the Afghan Response Route, at a cost of around £400 million (S$680 million), Mr Healey said.
Applications from 600 more people have also been accepted, bringing the estimated total cost of the scheme to £850 million.
They are among some 36,000 Afghans who have been accepted by Britain under different schemes since
the August 2021 fall of Kabul.
As Labour's opposition defence spokesman, Mr Healey was briefed on the scheme in December 2023 but the Conservative government asked a court to impose a 'super-injunction' banning any mention of it in parliament or by the press.
When Labour came to power in July 2024, the scheme was in full swing but Mr Healey said he had been 'deeply uncomfortable to be constrained from reporting' to Parliament.
'Ministers decided not to tell parliamentarians at an earlier stage about the data incident, as the widespread publicity would increase the risk of the Taliban obtaining the dataset,' he explained.
'No retribution'
Mr Healey set up a review of the scheme when he became defence minister in the new Labour government.
This concluded there was 'very little evidence of intent by the Taliban to conduct a campaign of retribution'.
The Afghan Response Route has now been closed, the minister said, apologising for the data breach which 'should never have happened'.
He estimated the total cost of relocating people from Afghanistan to Britain at between £5.5 billion and £6 billion.
Conservative party defence spokesman James Cartlidge also apologised for the leak which happened under the previous Tory government.
But he defended the decision to keep it secret, saying the aim had been to avoid 'an error by an official of the British state leading to torture or even murder of persons in the dataset at the hands of what remains a brutal Taliban regime'.
Mr Healey said all those brought to the UK from Afghanistan had been accounted for in the country's immigration figures.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer has vowed to cut the number of migrants arriving in Britain.
In 2023, the UK defence ministry was fined £350,000 by a data watchdog for disclosing personal information of 265 Afghans seeking to flee Taliban fighters in the chaotic fall of Kabul two years earlier.
Britain's Afghanistan evacuation plan was widely criticised, with the government accused by MPs of 'systemic failures of leadership, planning and preparation'.
Hundreds of Afghans eligible for relocation were left behind, many with their lives potentially at risk after details of staff and job applicants were left at the abandoned British embassy in Kabul. AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
an hour ago
- Straits Times
R&A discussed Turnberry British Open with Trump's son
Find out what's new on ST website and app. PORTRUSH, Northern Ireland - R&A officials met with the son of U.S. President Donald Trump this year to discuss the possibility of golf's British Open returning to Turnberry, R&A Chief Executive Mark Darbon said on Wednesday. The Scottish course last staged the tournament in 2009, five years before Trump bought the resort. Logistical problems, however, have meant the Open cannot return there until improvements are made in the local transport infrastructure. "I met a couple of months ago with Eric Trump and some of the leadership from the Trump golf organisation and from Turnberry. We had a really good discussion," Darbon said. "I think they understand clearly where we're coming from. We talked through some of the challenges that we have, so we've got a good dialogue with them." The 2009 Turnberry Open was attended by 120,000 spectators, compared with the 280,000 expected to watch this year's event in Portrush. "I think we've been extremely clear on our position in respect of Turnberry," Darbon said. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Over 600 Telegram groups in Singapore selling, advertising vapes removed by HSA Singapore 2 weeks' jail for man caught smuggling over 1,800 vapes and pods into Singapore Singapore Jail for man who fatally hit his daughter, 2, while driving van without licence Singapore Primary 1 registration: 38 primary schools to conduct ballot in Phase 2A Singapore ComfortDelGro to introduce new taxi cancellation, waiting fee policy Business Cathay Cineplexes gets fresh demands to pay up $3.3m debt for Century Square, Causeway Point outlets Singapore Instead of overcomplicating COE system, Govt has ensured affordable transport for all: SM Lee to Jamus Lim Singapore Baby died after mum took abortion pills and gave birth in toilet; coroner records an open verdict "We love the golf course but we've got some big logistical challenges there. We've got some work to do on the road, rail and accommodation infrastructure around Turnberry." Discussions with the British government about Turnberry are also taking place. "We have an ongoing dialogue with the UK government given that we're a major event that creates significant value into the UK economy," he said. "I think this week's event will generate 210 million pounds ($280.79 million) of economic impact for the region which is fantastic." REUTERS


International Business Times
2 hours ago
- International Business Times
Donald Trump to Meet UK PM Keir Starmer in Scotland to Finalize Trade Talks
U.S. President Donald Trump announced on Tuesday that he expects to meet with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer later this month in Aberdeen, Scotland. The meeting aims to fine-tune elements of a U.S.-UK trade deal that both leaders initiated on June 16 during the G7 Summit in Canada. A White House official confirmed that Trump's visit to Scotland is scheduled from July 25 to July 29. He plans to visit both his Turnberry and Aberdeen golf courses, mirroring a similar trip made during his 2016 presidential campaign. The meeting with Starmer is expected to focus on unresolved trade issues, particularly involving tariffs on steel and aluminum. "We're going to have a meeting with him, probably in Aberdeen," Trump said. "We're going to do a lot of different things, also refine the trade deal that we've made." The current trade agreement reaffirms tariffs and quotas on British automobiles while removing tariffs on the U.K. aerospace sector. However, negotiations continue over steel and aluminum duties, which remain a sticking point. Trump famously praised Britain's Brexit vote during his 2016 visit to Scotland, celebrating at Turnberry while accompanied by traditional Scottish bagpipers. Turnberry, a historic Open Championship course, was purchased by Trump in 2014. Looking ahead, Trump is also scheduled for a state visit to Britain from September 17 to 19. He will be the guest of King Charles at Windsor Castle, following a similar visit hosted by the late Queen Elizabeth II in 2019. (With inputs from agencies)


AsiaOne
13 hours ago
- AsiaOne
Russia, Iran and China intensifying life-threatening operations in UK, police say, World News
LONDON — Russia, Iran and China are behind a growing number of life-threatening operations in Britain including attacks and kidnappings, often deploying criminals and sometimes children as proxies, two senior British police officers said on Tuesday (July 15). The British authorities in recent years have repeatedly voiced concern at what they said was malign activity by the three states in Britain, ranging from traditional espionage and actions to undermine the state, to sabotage and assassinations. Those accusations have been rejected by Moscow, Beijing and Tehran, which say they are politically motivated. On Tuesday, the two British officers said told reporters there had been a fivefold increase in hostile state activity since the Novichok nerve agent poisoning of Russian double agent Sergei Skripal in Salisbury in 2017, which London says was carried out by Russian spies. Dominic Murphy, who heads up London's Counter Terrorism Command, said the breadth, complexity and volume of hostile operations from Russia, Iran and China had grown at a rate neither they nor their international partners nor any intelligence community had predicted. "We are increasingly seeing these three states... undertaking threat-to-life operations in the United Kingdom," he told reporters. In most instances, proxies, usually criminals acting quite often for small amounts of cash, were carrying out the states' work for them, said Vicki Evans, the Senior National Coordinator for UK Counter Terrorism Policing. The proxies also included vulnerable people or those who felt disenfranchised, with those aged in their mid teens among those arrested or under investigation. "We are concerned that they might find themselves in an online environment where they're encouraged or egged on to do something and don't understand what they're being asked to do," said Evans, adding they were less concerned that the children were ideologically motivated. Earlier this month, three men were convicted over an arson attack on Ukraine-linked businesses in London, which police said had been ordered by Russia's Wagner mercenary group. Their ringleader had earlier admitted plotting to kidnap a critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin. Last year, the head of Britain's domestic spy agency MI5 said that, since January 2022, there had been 20 Iran-backed plots to kidnap or kill British nationals or individuals based in Britain who Tehran regarded as a threat. "We know that they are continuing to try and sow violence on the streets of the United Kingdom, they too are to some extent relying on criminal proxies to do that," Murphy said of Iran. [[nid:720261]]