logo
How an email error sparked a secret scramble to bring thousands of Afghans to Britain

How an email error sparked a secret scramble to bring thousands of Afghans to Britain

CTV News6 days ago
LONDON — British governments past and present face allegations of avoiding scrutiny and undermining democracy after the revelation that thousands of Afghans have been resettled in the U.K under a program that was hidden from the media, the public and lawmakers in Parliament.
Key information was also kept from the Afghans themselves, who had assisted U.K. forces and whose personal details had been disclosed in a huge data leak. Many plan to sue the British government for putting them in danger from the Taliban. Some are left in Afghanistan as the current British government says the resettlement program will end.
Here's what happened in an extraordinary chain of events.
An email error with huge consequences
The saga was triggered by the chaotic Western exit from Afghanistan in August 2021 as the Taliban, ousted from power 20 years earlier, swept across the country, seized Kabul and reimposed their strict version of Islamic law.
Afghans who had worked with Western forces — as fixers, translators and in other roles — or who had served in the internationally backed Afghan army were at risk of retribution. Britain set up a program, known as the Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy, or ARAP, to bring some to the U.K.
In February 2022, a defense official emailed a spreadsheet containing the personal information of nearly 19,000 ARAP applicants to someone outside the Ministry of Defense. The government says the individual thought they were sending a list of about 150 names, not the whole set.
The British government only became aware of the leak when a portion of the data was posted on Facebook 18 months later by someone who threatened to publish the whole list.
The government sought secrecy
The leak sparked alarm among British officials who feared as many as 100,000 people were in danger when family numbers of the named individuals were added. The then-Conservative government sought a court order barring publication of the list.
A judge granted a sweeping order known as a super injunction, which barred anyone from revealing not only information about the leak but the existence of the injunction itself.
Super injunctions are relatively rare and their use is controversial. Most of the handful of cases in which they have come to light involved celebrities trying to prevent disclosures about their private lives. This is the first known case of a super injunction being granted to the government.
Former Defense Secretary Ben Wallace said Wednesday that he sought the legal order to gain 'time and space to deal with this leak, find out whether the Taliban had it' and protect those at risk.
Wallace said he asked for an ordinary injunction — not a super injunction — for a period of four months. The gag order remained in place for almost two years.
A secret program sparked a legal battle
The government began bringing to Britain the Afghans on the leaked list who were judged to be most at risk. To date, some 4,500 people — 900 applicants and approximately 3,600 family members — have been brought to Britain under the program. About 6,900 people are expected to be relocated by the time it closes, at a cost of 850 million pounds (US$1.1 billion).
In all, about 36,000 Afghans have been resettled in the U.K. since 2021.
Meanwhile, several news organizations had learned of the leaked list but were barred from publishing stories about it. They challenged the super injunction in court, and a judge ordered it lifted in May 2024 — but it remained in place after the government appealed.
The government finally came clean
Britain held an election in July 2024 that brought the center-left Labour Party to power. Prime Minister Keir Starmer and his Cabinet learned of the injunction soon after taking office and grappled with how to proceed.
In January, the government ordered a review by a former senior civil servant. They found little evidence that the leaked data would expose Afghans to a greater risk of retribution from the Taliban. The review said the Taliban had other sources of information on those who had worked with the previous Afghan government and international forces and is more concerned with current threats to its authority.
Given those findings, the government dropped its support for the super injunction. The injunction was lifted in court Tuesday, and minutes later Defense Secretary John Healey stood in the House of Commons to make the saga public for the first time.
Many questions remain unanswered
Healey said the secret settlement route was being closed, but acknowledged Wednesday that 'the story is just beginning,' and many questions remain unanswered.
Immigration critics including Reform UK leader Nigel Farage are demanding to know what screening was done on the people who came under the secret program.
Lawyers for Afghans on the leaked list want to know why the information was kept from them. Adnan Malik, head of data privacy at U.K. legal firm Barings Law, said he was assembling a class-action lawsuit by hundreds of former translators, soldiers and others.
Lawmakers and free speech advocates say the use of a super injunction is deeply worrying. They ask how Parliament and the media can hold the government to account if there is such stringent secrecy.
Judge Martin Chamberlain, who ruled that the injunction should be lifted, said Tuesday at the High Court that the super injunction 'had the effect of completely shutting down the ordinary mechanisms of accountability.'
Healey acknowledged that 'you cannot have democracy with super injunctions in place,' and said the government had acted as quickly and safely as it could.
'Accountability starts now,' he told the BBC.
Jill Lawless, The Associated Press
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Canada should follow U.K.'s move to lower voting age to 16, says senator
Canada should follow U.K.'s move to lower voting age to 16, says senator

CTV News

time2 hours ago

  • CTV News

Canada should follow U.K.'s move to lower voting age to 16, says senator

A voter leaves a polling station after casting a ballot in the federal election in Calgary on Monday, April 28, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh OTTAWA — Now that the British government has vowed to lower its voting age to 16 by the next general election, one Canadian senator says it's past time for Canada to do the same. The U.K. announced last week that it would lower its voting age from 18 to 16 in a bid to strengthen British democracy and restore trust in politics. Sen. Marilou McPhedran said the issue has been her 'top parliamentary priority' since she joined the Red Chamber. She said lowering the voting age to 16 would be good for democracy and that the only arguments against it are 'based on stereotypes.' McPhedran said decisions being made in Canada now will affect younger generations and that extending voting rights to younger people is 'logical' and 'about fairness.' She added that about a third of 16-year-olds in Canada have some form of employment and are already taxpayers. Sixteen-year-old Jaden Braves and the organization he leads, Young Politicians of Canada, want to see the federal voting age lowered to 16. He told The Canadian Press that Canada 'has to stop living in the shadow of other countries' innovation that's progressing faster than ours.' 'I think we need to stop being the country that waits for somebody else to take leadership on something we clearly have the chance to progress forward on,' he said. 'Hopefully we'll learn some lessons soon.' Braves lamented the many bills that have been introduced in Canada over the past 20 years to lower the voting age that ultimately failed to pass. McPhedran's most recent bill to lower the federal voting age to 16 was introduced at the end of May. She said it's her priority to get it to second reading and into committee when Parliament resumes in September. 'What happened last time was prorogation and an election,' she said. Prorogation killed the bill after it reached second reading in the Senate. 'But this time our push is to ensure that young voices, young leaders are heard directly by senators, and I feel quite confident that when that happens, skeptics will turn around,' McPhedran added. McPhedran said she thinks what's happening in the U.K. will 'make a difference' for a number of senators as she continues to push the bill forward. During debates on previous bills, some senators and MPs have pushed back against arguments in favour of lowering the voting age, such as the suggestion that it would increase voter turnout. Some have also questioned the maturity of youth to cast an informed ballot and debated what standards should be used to justify whether to lower the voting age. Britain's voting age last fell in 1969, when the U.K. became one of the first major democracies to lower it from 21 to 18. Many other countries quickly followed suit; Canada lowered its voting age to 18 in 1970. Several countries already have a voting age of 16, including Austria, Brazil and Ecuador. Scotland and Wales allow 16- and 17-year-olds to vote in local and regional elections. Michael Wigginton, a post-doctoral fellow in political science at Carleton University, said the U.K. government's decision represents a 'fairly natural progression,' coming a decade after Scotland started allowing 16-year-olds to vote for members of the Scottish Parliament and in municipal elections. 'Having that sort of local example to point to makes it easier for both politicians and the public at large to feel comfortable that the reform can work for the U.K. Parliament and not have negative effects,' said Wigginton. Efforts are being made across Canada to lower the voting age. In 2021, young Canadians filed an application at the Ontario Superior Court of Justice to challenge the voting age, arguing that the Canada Elections Act is in violation of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and is unconstitutional. Toronto recently passed a motion allowing 16 and 17-year-olds to vote in polls at the neighbourhood level on planning and policy issues. And a provincial committee looking at ways to boost democratic engagement in B.C. is examining a lower voting age. Wigginton said that while he doesn't expect Canada to immediately adopt a voting age of 16, having the U.K. as an example will 'definitely push the issue into the spotlight more and increase the chances of it happening it the future.' 'What I see is most likely is that one or more provinces will adopt a lower voting age first and then the federal government may eventually follow suit,' he said. With files from The Associated Press This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 23, 2025. Catherine Morrison, The Canadian Press

Taliban say efforts to release a British couple from Afghan prison not yet complete
Taliban say efforts to release a British couple from Afghan prison not yet complete

Toronto Star

time3 hours ago

  • Toronto Star

Taliban say efforts to release a British couple from Afghan prison not yet complete

ISLAMABAD (AP) — The Taliban said Wednesday that efforts to free a British couple from an Afghan prison are not yet complete and denied that their rights were being violated despite concerns from their families and U.N. officials. Peter and Barbie Reynolds, who are in their 70s, were arrested in early February after being taken from their home in central Bamiyan province to the capital, Kabul.

Council approves massive southwest London subdivision, homebuyer loan program, and more
Council approves massive southwest London subdivision, homebuyer loan program, and more

CBC

time3 hours ago

  • CBC

Council approves massive southwest London subdivision, homebuyer loan program, and more

Social Sharing London City Council approved several consequential decisions Tuesday evening that will impact everything from the future of a southwest London neighbourhood, where future development will be allowed, to training for first responders. Here are some of the highlights: Go-ahead given for 4,000-home plan to densify southwest neighbourhood Council voted to green light a controversial development proposal that some residents worry will dramatically alter a low-density suburban neighbourhood in the city's southwest. After a lengthy debate, councillors voted 9-to-5 in favour of changing the zoning rules for a large plot of farmland at 6309 Pack Rd., to pave the way for 4,000 new dwellings which could accommodate as many as 7,000 people. The dwellings would be spread across 206 single-family houses, 36 street townhouse units, and five high-density apartment blocks, served by six new streets. The tallest of the buildings could be as high as 16 storeys tall — something residents have opposed since the proposal by Southside Construction Ltd. first became public. Still, despite the opposition, councillors who approved the request said development in the area is necessary, and the proposal is an example of what London needs moving forward, especially to reach a province mandate. The opposition has been spearheaded by a purpose-built group called the North Talbot Homeowners Association. It argued the plan completely ignores height and density limits laid out by two separate development plans, the city-wide London Plan and the area-specific Southwest Area Secondary Plan. While the residents were unable to participate in the council session, Coun. Anna Hopkins, whose ward the future subdivision is in, said she agrees with the residents despite acknowledging the need for high-density developments in the city. Hopkins has argued on multiple occasions that several key questions regarding the application remained unanswered. Coun. Corrine Rahman, in Hopkins's corner, argued that the lack of services like schools and transit in the area is not something that should be pushed down the road. "I represent the northwest. The northwest part of the city is very similar to the southwest ... and they feel very similar in terms of the ability to have services online when [people] move into a community," Rahman said. "The northwest part of the city is also concerned with the fact that it's been 15 years, and they've been promised transit, and they don't have it." On the other hand, councillors who agree with the plan maintained their claims that the terms attached to the application will ensure issues related to infrastructure, congestion, and more will have to be addressed before shovels hit the ground. Growth boundary consultations to continue On the topic of development, councillors accepted the recommendation to continue the process of consulting the community, developers and local indigenous communities in their review of the city's growth boundary. Council voted in December to move 1,476 hectares of land inside the city's urban growth boundary. The boundary, located inside the city limits but outside its core, is intended to help manage growth by constraining sprawl while preserving farmland. The proposed changes to the growth boundary are still in draft form as public feedback is gathered, and the changes will continue to undergo consultation before final approval, which is expected later this year. A number of developers are currently vying to have properties they own added in the review. Location set for future Emergency Services Campus in London Council also selected the final location for a future Emergency Services Campus that promises to be a training hub for southwestern Ontario's first responders. Council voted 14-to-1 to place the future facilities on a plot of city-owned land at 3243 Manning Dr., roughly six kilometres south of Hwy. 401. Those in favour noted the potential for the city to recover the costs of creating the campus, especially if other police, fire and EMS services across the southwest are encouraged to use it for training. "It speaks to the fact that London is ... the capital of southwestern Ontario in terms of standing alone as the largest single-tier municipality," said Deputy Mayor Shawn Lewis. "There are numerous emergency services throughout the region that need training." Mayor Josh Morgan said efforts are underway to secure funding from higher levels of government for the campus. Questions remain, specifically from residents who have concerns over pollution and smells from burning materials for firefighter training, diminishing road quality from heavy vehicle traffic, and noise from a planned on-site firing range. Those concerns were raised by Coun. Elizabeth Peloza. City staff assured councillors they would provide them with a report containing answers to these concerns, along with information on an updated study on the feasibility of the site. The last feasibility study, which can't be made public because it contains sensitive operational details regarding the London Police Service, was finished in 2023. Return of the Affordable Homeownership Program Council voted to renew a program that provides interest-free loans to aspiring homeowners looking to break into the housing market. That's despite opposition from some councillors who sought to find other uses — like London's winter homelessness response — for the provincial funding that goes into the program. A motion to that end from Coun. Susan Stevenson fell flat because of the narrow accepted use case for the money, which is only available for affordable housing-related applications. City staff said the province may not approve a change if the city sought it, and may even reallocate the money to a different municipality in response. Stevenson argued she had spoken to provincial officials and believed the province would allow a different use for the money. Council voted 13-to-2 in favour of relaunching the Affordable Homeownership Program, which initially ran from 2008 to 2013. During the program's initial run, the city issued 270 loans, lent out $2,317,466, discharged 173 loans and received $2,443,010 in repayments. The newly renewed program will help 124 households and will cost the city $3.1 million, which has been sitting in its coffers since the program first went on pause. The $3.1 million comes from previously repaid loans and the interest accrued on that money. If a home purchased with a loan is resold at a greater price than the original purchase price, the purchaser pays five per cent of the capital gains back to the city. Loans are automatically forgiven on their 20th anniversary. According to Coun. David Ferreira, that means the program can sustain itself and roll on into the future while also helping clear rental waitlists.

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