logo
Up to 3,700 Afghans, troops and civil servants may be victims of new data breach

Up to 3,700 Afghans, troops and civil servants may be victims of new data breach

STV News18 hours ago
Some 3,700 Afghans, British troops and civil servants may have fallen victim to a new data breach, after an incident involving a company linked to the Ministry of Defence.
Stansted-based Inflite The Jet Centre Ltd suffered a data security incident which led to 'unauthorised access to a limited number of company emails', according to the firm.
The company provides ground handling for flights operated under a contract involving the MoD and the Cabinet Office.
About 3,700 individuals are thought to be potentially affected by the incident, including Afghans who were brought the UK.
It was revealed in July that some Afghans who fought alongside British forces had their data leaked when defence official released the details of 18,714 individuals 'in error' in February 2022.
Troops travelling to routine military exercises and journalists accompanying ministers on official engagements are also among the potential victims.
'We were recently notified that a third party sub-contractor to a supplier experienced a cyber security incident involving unauthorised access to a small number of its emails that contained basic personal information,' a Government spokesperson said.
'We take data security extremely seriously and are going above and beyond our legal duties in informing all potentially affected individuals. The incident has not posed any threat to individuals' safety, nor compromised any Government systems.'
A statement published on Inflite The Jet Centre's website said: 'We believe the scope of the incident was limited to email accounts only, however, as a precautionary measure, we have contacted our key stakeholders whose data may have been affected during the period of January to March 2024.'
The data is not thought to have been shared publicly or released on the dark web.
In one email, seen by the PA news agency, the Cabinet Office told a passenger that there was 'a risk' their visa details and information about their job had been leaked.
Their passport details may also have been compromised. The notification read: 'HM Passport Office advises that you do not need to cancel or replace your passport, as security measures are in place to prevent misuse without the physical document.'
The victim may be affected by the leak 'because certain information is required by ground-handling companies to enable flights to depart and to arrive'.
In a separate notification reported in The Independent and The Times, the Government's Afghan resettlement team said that Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy (Arap) reference numbers may also have been leaked.
Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News
Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Labour has condemned London to be Europe's capital for Rolex and Range Rover theft
Labour has condemned London to be Europe's capital for Rolex and Range Rover theft

Telegraph

time42 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Labour has condemned London to be Europe's capital for Rolex and Range Rover theft

Britain is facing an epidemic of shoplifting. Retailers are collectively facing just under three thefts per minute, almost double what it was 10 years ago. Over half a million such offences were reported last year. The rise of this larceny has partly been blamed on the downgrading in 2014 of the seriousness of 'low value' theft of items worth less than £200. The Government has announced that this policy is being reversed, but it looks set to make an equally serious mistake which will likely see London becoming Europe's capital of high-value thefts. It is not as if this problem is not already with us. While Range Rovers are no longer the most stolen car (Toyota Hilux pickup trucks now top that uncoveted league), they have been so prone to being pilfered that insurance rates soared. In London, annual quotes of over £20,000 became the norm as a result. The same phenomenon is true for insuring watches and jewellery. When I took a look myself, I found fine art premiums in general are 0.3pc of value or less – those for valuables that are worn will often be 10 times higher, at 3pc or more.

1,200 ex-cons returned to prison amid reoffending increase
1,200 ex-cons returned to prison amid reoffending increase

The Herald Scotland

time2 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

1,200 ex-cons returned to prison amid reoffending increase

And a leading victim support charity has called on the Scottish Government to reform the "confusing" process. In 2021, the Parole Board of Scotland recommended that the Scottish Government revoke the release licences of 241 people. That number also dipped in 2022, slipping to 226, before an increase of 19.5% in 2023 (270 people). Last year, 285 people were sent back to prison, while 152 have been remanded during the first six months of 2025. That is a total of 1,174 people. The number of inmates in Scottish prisons averaged 7,860 in 2023/24, up 6% from the previous year. (Image: Colin Mearns) Meanwhile, 1,009 prisoners had been issued with release declarations or recommendations by the parole board between 2021 and 2025. The figures reveal that 248 prisoners were paroled in 248, followed by 191 in 2022. The number rose by 18.8% to 227 in 2023, before rising again to 240 last year. And in the first six months of 2025, 103 prisoners were paroled. According to the parole board, the 1,174 recommendations made by the board include people who had been released from prison on a 'parole' licence, as well as those who were released automatically 'upon reaching their earliest date of liberation'. However, Scottish Government ministers are permitted to revoke licenses without asking the board for a recommendation, which means the total number of reoffenders could be greater. While the terms of parole differ for each inmate, all continue a standard set of conditions, which include acting in 'good behavior', agreeing to visits and remaining in contact with one's parole officer, and not committing any offence. Kate Wallace, Chief Executive of Victim Support Scotland, told The Herald that the parole system could be 'vastly improved'. She said: 'While we acknowledge that parole decisions are purely based on risk, we fully support any changes to the system to make it more victim-centred, transparent and trauma-informed. "Victims often tell us they feel confused by the parole process and that they are not routinely informed when the perpetrator in their case breaches licence conditions. This presents them with a multitude of challenges, including their ability to plan for their own safety. People deserve to feel safe in their own homes and communities. Victim Support Scotland has called for a rethink of the current parole system. Wallace added: "We look forward to the Scottish Government's upcoming consultation on parole which will give people impacted by crime a voice in strengthening this important process. "In the meantime, Victim Support Scotland stands ready to support victims of crime at any stage of their journey, including helping them to navigate the parole system. The Parole Board's Annual Report for 2023/24, explains how applications for release are assessed, noting: 'The Board only grants release in cases where the level and nature of risk are deemed to be manageable. This decision is informed by oral or written evidence in the form of witness evidence or, usually, reports contained in dossiers.' However, in June, the Scottish Prison Service (SPS) revealed that more than 150 violent offenders had been released in February and March 2025, in a bid to combat overcrowding in the prison estate. 312 inmates who had served 40% of their sentence were released over the two months, 152 of which had been imprisoned for violent crimes of a non-sexual nature. Prisoners who have committed domestic abuse or sexual offences are not included in the early release provision. At the time, the SPS said the number of incarcerated people in Scotland's prisons had reached a critical level. "While these releases have provided some respite,' a spokesperson said, 'our staff continue to manage an extremely high and complex population, with eight prisons now at red risk status, and the number of people in custody set to rise even further. "This has an increasingly destabilising effect on our establishments, with staff unable to do the critical work of building relationships and supporting rehabilitation, and prisoners frustrated by the impact on their daily lives and the opportunities available to them." Read more: 'A pressure cooker': More than 8,000 violent prison assaults recorded 'More psychologists in Scottish prisons could prevent overcrowding' 'No plan': Swinney accused over response to spiralling taxpayer cost of prisons Reacting to the release of the figures, a Scottish Government spokesperson said: 'Decisions on individual cases are a matter for the independent Parole Board for Scotland. Their decisions, including those around recall, are based on a clear risk assessment of any individuals being managed safely in the community. 'The parole system could work better for everyone – hearing a wide range of views is essential to developing a more person-centred, trauma-informed system. 'That is why [we] have already committed to a public consultation on reform of the parole system. It will be informed by direct engagement with victims, justice partners, and those with lived experience, driving a parole system that is fair, transparent, and trusted.'

Police Scotland 'breaching human rights to subdue Palestine protests'
Police Scotland 'breaching human rights to subdue Palestine protests'

The National

time3 hours ago

  • The National

Police Scotland 'breaching human rights to subdue Palestine protests'

Moira McFarlane, an Edinburgh-based activist, said her home had been visited after midnight by three plain-clothes officers – despite the fact that she has never been arrested or charged with anything. 'I'm a 58-year-old yoga teacher. I'm really not a criminal,' she said. 'When they come in knocking on your door at midnight, it's a police state. It's crazy.' Another Palestine activist, Andrew Thomson, said he had been lifted from an Edinburgh street, kept in a police station for eight hours, and charged with terror offences two days after allegedly wearing a t-shirt outside Bute House. READ MORE: Scottish screenwriter Paul Laverty dons 'Palestine Action' top at Fringe The t-shirt read 'Genocide in Palestine time to take action'. Other activists have also been charged for wearing clothes with the same or similar slogans as they were alleged to be in support of Palestine Action, a protest group which the Labour Government has proscribed as a terror organisation. The proscription has been condemned by Volker Türk, the UN's human rights chief, who said it puts the UK 'at odds' with international law and 'limits the rights of many people involved with and supportive of Palestine Action who have not themselves engaged in any underlying criminal activity but rather exercised their rights to freedom of expression, peaceful assembly and association'. Earlier in August, the Scottish Human Rights Commission (SHRC) warned Police Scotland that its policing of pro-Palestine protesters risked breaching human rights. Police Scotland's Chief Constable Jo Farrell (Image: PA) Professor Angela O'Hagan, the commission's chair, said in a letter to the Chief Constable, Lord Advocate, and Justice Secretary that rights to free expression and freedom of assembly were guaranteed under the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), adding: 'In general, only incitement to violence, the justification of terrorist acts, or the encouragement of violence towards specific people can be restricted. The expression of a political or moral viewpoint is protected.' Police Scotland insisted their actions are "appropriate", but Thomson said that Türk and O'Hagan's warnings are 'exactly what's happened'. 'The key thing is this is excessive and this is draconian policing,' he went on. 'They're conflating political and moral expression with terrorism, and they're doing it deliberately. 'The smear will bring about fear. And in my own understanding, this is what Keir Starmer's Britain is all about. Starmer's Britain requires fear. But for me, for many, many others, and the good people in Scotland, it's Palestine that commands courage.' READ MORE: Leaked document 'leaves Government's Palestine Action case in tatters' Thomson said he was arrested in the Cowgate area on Monday, July 21, after allegations that a t-shirt he had worn on July 19 had expressed support for a terrorist organisation. He then received 'bail checks', where Police Scotland officers turned up on his doorstep, four times in four days. 'I was really alarmed by the fact that the reason for the visits had zero plausibility,' he said, disputing that reaffirming his bail conditions could have been the force's true reason for the visits. 'It is about harassment. It's an intrusion into private family life. Who has signed the order for them to make those four visits? 'I guess what's happening to me just now would be one tactic that Police Scotland undertook to try and subdue protests against the genocide. That seems plausible to me, and definitely there's zero plausibility about reminding of your [bail] condition.' READ MORE: Arms firms lobbied for Palestine Action 'terrorists' label, files show Hours after the Sunday National spoke to Thomson, he received a letter from the Crown Office advising that his court date had been cancelled and bail conditions lifted, just days after SHRC chair O'Hagan's intervention. Both Thomson and McFarlane alleged that Police Scotland had infringed on their human rights. It comes after a third pro-Palestine activist, the Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign's Mick Napier, 78, sent a legal letter to Police Scotland alleging intimidation after his address was visited by officers seven times in seven days. Mark Harrower, a senior criminal defence lawyer and former president of the Edinburgh Bar Association, suggested that claims of reminding of bail conditions were not credible and the 'only possible explanation for these repeated visits is to intimidate'. 'Not only is this a huge waste of police resources, it makes Scotland look like it is turning into a police state,' Harrower wrote. 'It is nothing short of harassment. I request that your officers stop harassing my client.' The National has also reported on the case of Kimberley Davidson, in the Scottish Borders, who also faced daily visits from police officers claiming to be there to remind her of bail conditions. A Police Scotland spokesperson said: "We carry out appropriate checks as required in line with conditions imposed by the courts." A Scottish Government spokesperson said: 'The Scottish Government supports individuals' rights to freedom of expression. 'We live in a society where people have the democratic right to campaign and express views in a peaceful and lawful manner.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store