|
ID cards behind schedule, admits Home Office Nigel Morris / London Independent | July 12 2006 Tony Blair's cherished national identity card scheme is in crisis after the Home Office admitted its introduction is likely to be delayed. The first cards were meant to be introduced in 2008, but that target has been dropped following the review of the department ordered by John Reid after his appointment as Home Secretary. Tendering for contracts for the £5.8bn programme, which would eventually force every adult to provide fingerprint and iris scans, has also been put off until the end of this year. Mr Reid has already signalled that controversial proposals to merge police forces are to be slowed down - or even scrapped. Last night he faced further embarrassment when his predecessor, Charles Clarke, attacked the mergers U-turn as "weak and damaging" and said it would harm the fight against terrorism. The Home Office insisted yesterday that ID cards remained a centrepiece of its strategy for combating identity fraud, serious crime and illegal immigration. But news of the delay fuelled speculation that the scheme could be ditched by Gordon Brown, who does not share Mr Blair's enthusiasm for the proposals, upon his arrival in Downing Street. ID cards were championed by Mr Blair and David Blunkett, the former home secretary. They eventually reached the statute book in March, amid controversy. The Home Office said yesterday that it would not
be bound by the "artificial target" of 2008. A spokesman said:
"Biometric identity is absolutely essential and that remains the
case. Any suggestion we are not going ahead with the scheme is wrong."The
plans to merge police forces have also fallen victim to the new regime.
Mr Clarke had drawn up plans to reduce the 43 forces in England and
Wales to 17. But it was announced yesterday that the proposals will
be reviewed. Plans in crisis Identity Cards Proposed: April 2004 by David Blunkett. Delayed: Yesterday. Reason: Complexity. Police Mergers Proposed: September 2005 by Charles Clarke. Delayed: Last month. Reason: Widely opposed. Private Sector-run Probation Services Proposed: June 2004 by David Blunkett. Delayed: April 2006. Reason: Services hostility. Powers to shut 'Extremist' Mosques Proposed: August 2005 by Tony Blair. Abandoned: December 2005. Reason: Hostility from police and religious leaders. Time Limit For Terror Extraditions Proposed: August 2005 by Tony Blair. Abandoned: This week. Reason: Legal problems. --------------------------------------------------- Prison Planet.tv: The Premier Multimedia Subscription Package: Download and Share the Truth! Please help our fight against the New World Order by giving a donation. As bandwidth costs increase, the only way we can stay online and expand is with your support. Please consider giving a monthly or one-off donation for whatever you can afford. You can pay securely by either credit card or Paypal. Click here to donate. |