You are in > manchester.com  > News > Top-secret files abandoned on train
 

Politics

Top-secret files abandoned on train

11/06/2008

Two intelligence documents marked 'top-secret' were left abandoned on a train in London, it has emerged.

The documents, both reports by the joint intelligence committee, were abandoned on a train and belonged to a top Cabinet Office official. One covered al-Qaida's current weaknesses while the other focused on Iraq.

A passenger on the train, leaving London's Waterloo station on its way to Surrey, found the papers and handed them to the BBC. The incident appears to be a major breach of security rules governing the handling of top-secret information.

A Cabinet Office spokesperson confirmed that a "security breach" had occurred and added the Metropolitan police was carrying out an investigation to determine the circumstances surrounding the incident.

Opposition politicians have immediately jumped to criticise the incident, which has come under repeated attacks over data security since HM Revenue and Customs lost the personal records of 25 million child benefit claimants in November 2007.

Shadow security minister Baroness Neville-Jones called for an immediate statement to parliament on the issue and demanded an inquiry be launched.

"This is just the latest in a long line of serious breaches of security involving either the loss of data, documents or government lap tops, further highlighting the most basic failures in this government's ability to maintain our security," she said.

Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesperson Chris Huhne went further, describing the incident as "an appalling breach of security".

"There should be strict guidelines about when such secret documents are outside carefully monitored premises," he commented.

"It beggars belief that the government could have scored such a devastating own goal on the very day that it was pushing draconian counter terrorism laws through parliament."ADNFCR-8000014-ID-18634878-ADNFCR

Comments on this story

Add your comments here

No comments submitted yet

Your name
Email address (will not be displayed or used for any other purpose)
Title
Comments
 

Bookmark with:
Bookmark with delicious Delicious   Bookmark with Digg Digg   Bookmark with Reddit Reddit   Bookmark with Facebook Facebook   Bookmark with StumbleUpon StumbleUpon     (What are these?)


Social bookmark links
The social bookmark links enable you to share content you find on our site with other users who may find it of interest. If you have an account with any of these sites, just click the link to instantly share this feature with other users or alternatively you can sign up for any of them in a matter of minutes for free. For more on social bookmarking you can read the Wikipedia article.

News feeds
Manchester News Feed National News Feed Entertainment News Feed Sport News Feed