Foreign national ID card unveiled
Foreign national ID card unveiled - Via BBC NEWS | UK | UK Politics :
The first identity cards from the government's controversial national scheme have been unveiled.
The biometric card will be issued from November, initially to non-EU students and marriage visa holders.
Home Secretary Jacqui Smith said the cards would allow people to "easily and securely prove their identity".
Critics say the roll-out to some immigrants is a "softening up" exercise for the introduction of identity cards for everyone.
The card will also include information on holders' immigration status.
"We want to be able to prevent those here illegally from benefiting from the privileges of Britain," she said.
Employers and colleges want to be confident people are who they say they are, she said, and immigration and police officers want to verify identity and detect abuse.
"We all want to see our borders more secure, and human trafficking, organised immigration crime, illegal working and benefit fraud tackled. ID cards for foreign nationals, in locking people to one identity, will deliver in all these areas," she added.
The UK Border Agency will begin issuing the biometric cards to the two categories of foreign nationals who officials say are most at risk of abusing immigration rules - students and those on a marriage or civil partnership visa.
Both types of migrants will be told they must have the new card when they ask to extend their stay in the country.
The cards partly replace a paper-based system of immigration stamps - but will now include the individual's name and picture, their nationality, immigration status and two fingerprints.
Immigration officials will store the details centrally and, in time, they are expected to be merged into the proposed national identity register.
The card cannot be issued to people from most parts of Europe because they have the right to move freely in and out of the UK.
The Conservatives oppose the UK's identity card scheme but say they support the use of biometric information in immigration documents.
"The Government are kidding themselves if they think ID cards for foreign nationals will protect against illegal immigration or terrorism - since they don't apply to those coming here for less than three months," said shadow home secretary Dominic Grieve.
Liberal Democrat shadow home secretary Chris Huhne said identity cards "remained a grotesque intrusion on the liberty of the British people" and the scheme "will prove to be a laminated Poll Tax".
"The government is using vulnerable members of our society, like foreign nationals who do not have the vote, as guinea pigs for a deeply unpopular and unworkable policy," he said.
SNP Home Affairs spokesman Pete Wishart MP said his party had opposed ID cards from the outset but the government's "abysmal record on data protection" was reason enough to cancel them.
He said the government looked "absurd" for pushing ahead with such a costly project.
(Read Original Article - Via BBC NEWS | UK | UK Politics .)
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