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EU Citizens Need Hard Proof of Status

Updated: Jul 3, 2021

From July 1 EU citizens with Settled Status living in the UK will have to rely on digital proof of their status. There is no plan for a hard copy of their status. As we know from the story below, the Home Office is not meticulous in keeping data secure. They recently 'lost' records of phone calls between the Home Secretary and Chief Constables about the Extinction Rebellion protests.


This isn't just about travel. It will be crucial to support mortgage applications, employment, and benefits. Please take a few seconds to email Dominic Raab, MP for Esher and Walton, asking that he supports a physical means for EU citizens to prove their settled status in the UK. We need to avoid another Windrush.


Over 200,000 Police records lost by the Home Office

A blunder led to the records of more than 15,000 people being deleted in their entirety from the Police National Computer, the Home Office has admitted. News of the data loss emerged last month, but on Monday the government put numbers on what had been erased.

The policing minister, Kit Malthouse, said in a written statement that a total of 209,550 offence records relating to 112,697 individuals had been deleted from the PNC, which is run by the Home Office, and used by forces across the UK. That included the entire records of 15,089 people.


The government has said the deletion was the result of a coding mistake on 10 January. The error affects fingerprints, DNA and arrest records, and the government hopes to contain the damage and that no records will be permanently lost.

Labour described the loss as “catastrophic”, warning that it could mean criminals could go free.

Malthouse said fewer than 200 fingerprint records had been erased and that work was yet to be completed to recover lost fingerprint and DNA records held on other linked systems. Also yet to be completed was “work to ensure we are deleting any data that should have been deleted as usual when this incident first began”.

The minister added: “We have also confirmed that no records of convictions have been deleted. Our analysis shows that 99.5% of the deleted records were created prior to 2011. Technicians are confident that all the data which has been deleted can be restored.”

However, restoration will take another 12 weeks, Malthouse said. In the meantime, police will have to use alternatives and hope that nothing is missed.

He said: “While the data is incomplete, there is the possibility that law enforcement partners will not have access to records and information that could help progress their inquiries and investigations.”

The government has appointed former Metropolitan police commissioner Lord Hogan-Howe to investigate why the blunder occurred. He is due to report next month.

The shadow home secretary, Nick Thomas-Symonds, said: “This statement confirms many of the worst fears about the impact of this catastrophic data loss. Even in the bes-case scenario, there will be three months during which criminals could walk free due to a dangerous lack of police records. “We do not trust a government with this appalling lack of leadership and grip will be able to rectify these huge errors. Ministers need to take personal responsibility for this huge security breach.”

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