
UK Special Forces blocked 2,000 credible asylum claims from Afghan commandos, MoD confirms
"We had a squadron of CF 333 with us. We worked closely together. These were NATO targets, UK planned operations," he said. — BBC
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Al Arabiya
8 hours ago
- Al Arabiya
Taliban deny arresting or monitoring Afghans after UK data leak
The Taliban government said Thursday it had not 'arrested' or 'monitored' Afghans involved in a secret British resettlement plan after a data breach was revealed this week. 'Nobody has been arrested for their past actions, nobody has been killed and nobody is being monitored for that,' said the government's deputy spokesman, Hamdullah Fitrat. 'Reports of investigation and monitoring of a few people whose data has been leaked are false.'


Leaders
a day ago
- Leaders
UK Secretly Relocated Afghans after Data Leak
The UK secretly relocated thousands of vulnerable Afghans after their personal data leaked online, exposing them to Taliban reprisals. This major security breach forced the previous government into urgent action, newly revealed court documents show. Secret Scheme Revealed The Ministry of Defence leaked highly sensitive information in early 2022. This data, including names and details of Afghans seeking UK relocation, appeared on Facebook later that year. Affected individuals immediately faced Taliban threats. Consequently, the former Conservative government launched a clandestine relocation program after Ministers feared the Taliban would target those named in the leak. This program remained hidden under a strict court-ordered 'superinjunction' until Tuesday. Defence Secretary John Healey publicly apologised for the breach on Tuesday. 'This serious data incident should never have happened,' Healey told Parliament. He extended a 'sincere apology' to all affected individuals, including MPs and military personnel named in the files. The incident ranks among Britain's worst security breaches. Thousands of lives faced extreme risk, particularly Afghans who supported British forces before the 2021 withdrawal. The relocation scheme has cost taxpayers approximately £400 million so far. It relocated around 4,500 Afghans and their families, Healey confirmed. Political Repercussions A Ministry of Defence review summary, also published Tuesday, stated over 16,000 affected people reached the UK by May 2024. Some used existing schemes. The leaked dataset contained information on nearly 19,000 applicants and families; a High Court summary cited over 33,000 affected individuals. The government secured the superinjection in 2023. Officials argued public disclosure could trigger Taliban killings. Now, the government faces lawsuits from breach victims. These cases will add significantly to the final cost. Meanwhile, the new Labour government, elected in July, has launched its own review. Healey stated no further Afghans will receive asylum solely due to the leak. A review found little evidence of a Taliban revenge campaign against former officials. This revelation surfaces amidst tight UK public finances and rising support for the anti-immigration Reform UK party. British forces originally deployed to Afghanistan in 2001 following the 9/11 attacks. Short link : Post Views: 57


Saudi Gazette
2 days ago
- Saudi Gazette
Thousands of Afghans were moved to UK in secret scheme after data breach
LONDON — Thousands of Afghans have moved to the UK under a secret scheme which was set up after a British official inadvertently leaked their data, it can be revealed. In February 2022, the personal details of nearly 19,000 people who had applied to move to the UK after the Taliban seized power in Afghanistan were leaked. The previous government learned of the breach in August 2023 when some of the details appeared on Facebook. A new resettlement scheme for those on the leaked list was set up nine months later, and has seen 4,500 Afghans arrive in the UK so far. But the existence of the leak and relocations were kept secret after the government obtained a super-injunction stopping it from becoming public. Details of the major data breach, the response and the number of Afghans granted the right to live in the UK as a result only came to light on Tuesday after a High Court judge ruled the gagging order should be leak contained the names, contact details and some family information of people potentially at risk of harm from the Street would not confirm whether the official responsible for the leak had faced disciplinary action, with a spokesman saying they would not comment on government also revealed on Tuesday:The MoD believes 600 Afghan soldiers included in the leak, plus 1,800 of their family members, are still in AfghanistanThe scheme is being closed down, but relocation offers already made to those who remain in Afghanistan will be honouredThe secret scheme - officially called the Afghan Relocation Route - has cost £400m so far, and is expected to cost a further £400m to £450mThe breach was committed mistakenly by an unnamed official at the MoDPeople whose details were leaked were only informed on TuesdaySpeaking in the House of Commons, Defence Secretary John Healey offered a "sincere apology" to those whose details had been included in the leak, which came to light when some appeared on said it was as a result of a spreadsheet being emailed "outside of authorised government systems", which he described as a "serious departmental error" - though the Metropolitan Police decided a police investigation was not said the leak was "one of many data losses" related to the Afghanistan evacuation during that period, and contained the names of senior military officials, government officials and leader Kemi Badenoch apologised on behalf of her told LBC: "Somebody made a terrible mistake and names were put out there... and we are sorry for that. That should not happen."In a 2024 High Court judgement made public on Tuesday, Mr Justice Chamberlain said it was "quite possible" that some of those who saw parts of the leaked document in a Facebook group "were Taliban infiltrators or spoke about it to Taliban-aligned individuals".It had earlier been feared the number of people at "risk of death or serious harm" because they appeared on the list, or because their family member did, could be as high as 100, a review of the incident carried out on behalf of the MoD found it was "highly unlikely" an individual would have been targeted solely because of the leaked data, which "may not have spread nearly as widely as initially feared".The MoD has declined to say how many people may have been arrested or killed as a result of the data same review judged the secret scheme to be an "extremely significant intervention" given the "potentially limited" risk posed by the email has been sent to those impacted by the breach, urging them to "exercise caution", and take steps like protecting their online activities and not responding to messages from unknown said those who have been relocated to the UK have already been counted in immigration disclosure dates back to the August 2021 withdrawal of US troops from Afghanistan, which saw the Taliban retake power and quickly surround the capital leak involved the names of people who had applied for the Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy (Arap) scheme, which the UK government set up to rapidly process applications by people who feared reprisals from the Taliban and move them to the evacuation - which saw 36,000 Afghans moved to the UK - has already been heavily criticised in the years since it was launched, with a 2022 inquiry by the Foreign Affairs Committee finding it was a "disaster" and a "betrayal".When the government set up a new relocation scheme last year in response to the leak, members of the press quickly learned about the government asked a judge to impose an injunction on the media. The court then imposed a type of order which prevented outlets from reporting any detail of the leak, or even that the injunction itself existed. Healey said he was not aware of any other similar injunctions being in told the House even he had been prevented from speaking about the breach because of the "unprecedented" injunction, after being informed while still shadow defence a summary of his judgment in court, Mr Justice Chamberlain said the gagging order had "given rise to serious free speech concerns".He continued: "The super-injunction had the effect of completely shutting down the ordinary mechanisms of accountability which operate in a democracy."This led to what I describe as a 'scrutiny vacuum'."Court documents disclosed on Tuesday revealed then-Defence Secretary Ben Wallace "personally" applied for the stringent injunction in order to give the government time to do "everything it reasonably can to help those who might have been put at further risk by the data compromise".The injunction was extended in November 2023 on the basis the Taliban may not have been aware of the leaked data's Mr Justice Chamberlain decided to lift it on the ground the MoD's internal review found the Taliban "likely already possess the key information in the dataset" and confirmation of its existence was "unlikely" to "substantially" raise the risk" faced by those defence secretary James Cartlidge, who was in government when the secret scheme was established, said "this data leak should never have happened and was an unacceptable breach of all relevant data protocols".Erin Alcock, a lawyer for the firm Leigh Day, which has assisted hundreds of Arap applicants and family members, called the breach a "catastrophic failure".Earlier this month, the government confirmed it had offered payouts to Afghans whose information had been compromised in a separate data breach. — BBC