Revealed: ‘Wild West’ for personal data undermines UK human rights

Spread the love

Original article by Jenna Corderoy republished from OpenDemocracy under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International licence.

Personal data rights are at risk in the UK. | pixinoo / Getty

Asylum seekers and trafficking victims among individuals hit by failures to provide copies of personal data

Basic legal rights are being undermined by public authorities in the UK, by failing to disclose what personal data they hold on individuals, including victims of human trafficking and the Windrush scandal, openDemocracy can reveal.

People requesting copies of their private information, such as police or immigration records, have faced long delays or had their requests ignored entirely. Others have been given folders with key documents missing.

This is having a knock-on effect in the justice system, with lawyers telling openDemocracy that asylum applications and claims for false imprisonment have been put on hold due to the delays.

Victims of the Windrush Scandal have also struggled to obtain copies of their immigration papers in order to claim compensation.

The UK’s data protection laws allow individuals to request a copy of any of their personal data that is held by an organisation. These applications, known as Subject Access Requests (SARs), have become a vital tool for collecting evidence in legal cases, as well as helping to hold authorities to account.

But a year-long investigation by openDemocracy has found that public authorities – including police forces and government departments – are routinely missing statutory response deadlines. The findings of the investigation are set out in a 27-page report published today.

In Whitehall, the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) stands out for its poor record for handling SARs. Last year, it responded to just one in five requests within the standard one-month deadline.

Lawyers and campaigners also singled out the Metropolitan Police for criticism. At the beginning of the year, almost 2,000 SARs being dealt with by the force were more than 60 days old.

In one case, lawyers needed to see the records of a human trafficking victim and asylum seeker, whom the Home Office had wrongfully accused of absconding when they were abducted by traffickers, held against their will and sexually exploited.

The government department later admitted it was wrong to withdraw the individual’s asylum application, and accepted they were a victim of trafficking and modern slavery. But the lawyers still needed to understand why the claim had been withdrawn in order to reinstate it. Lengthy delays to the SAR meant they had no choice but to progress the asylum case without these important documents, though the asylum claim was not reinstated until the day after the Home Office released them months later.

‘Wild West’

Individuals affected have almost no way to challenge their case. This has created a ‘wild west’ of personal data, in which public organisations are effectively free to flout the law.

The Information Commissioner’s Office, which is supposed to police SAR compliance, very rarely takes direct action, admitting it doesn’t “punish an organisation for breaking the law” apart from in the “most serious cases”.

Instead, the watchdog encourages ordinary citizens to pursue cases themselves through the courts. But this route is prohibitively expensive for most people, leaving them at the mercy of individual organisations, with little to no ability to enforce the law.

This is compounded by the fact that SAR compliance is already shrouded in secrecy, with several public authorities refusing to provide openDemocracy with their performance data.

An ICO spokesperson said that it provides “advice to organisations to improve their information rights practices” and has issued 13 reprimands since September 2022.

“We work closely with public authorities to monitor their regulatory obligations and help organisations respond effectively to requests for information,” they said. “We have processes in place to identify concerns, and these include looking at backlogs and how requests for information are handled.”

Major departments like the Home Office, Ministry of Justice, the Department for Work & Pensions and the Ministry of Defence are frequently complained about to the ICO.

In response to openDemocracy’s findings, a government spokesperson said: “We take our obligations under the Data Protection Act 2018 and UK General Data Protection Regulation very seriously, and we are working hard to remove delays to Subject Access Requests identified by the Information Commissioner’s Office.”

You can read our full report into SAR failures here.

Original article by Jenna Corderoy republished from OpenDemocracy under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International licence.

MPs urge action over ‘woeful lack of transparency’ in universities

UK professor condemns own university over collaboration with oil giant

How the UK government rebranded protest as extremism

Continue ReadingRevealed: ‘Wild West’ for personal data undermines UK human rights

Death, drought and devastation: Europe faces ‘huge number’ of climate extremes, report finds

Spread the love

https://www.itv.com/news/2024-04-22/death-drought-and-devastation-europe-faces-huge-number-of-climate-extremes

How was Europe impacted by climate extremes in 2023? ITV News’ Health & Science Correspondent Martin Stew explains the UN and EU report

Heat-related deaths have risen, wildfires the size of London, Paris and Berlin combined raged across Europe, and the UK coastline faced a “beyond extreme” marine heatwave in 2023, a climate report has found.

Europe, including Britain, suffered a “huge number” of climate extremes as the continent was hit by heatwaves, wildfires, droughts and flooding last year, EU and UN scientists have said.

Extreme weather has affected human health and caused billions of pounds in economic losses, and is set to worsen as the world warms, experts said as they launched a report on the European state of the climate in 2023.

The report, from the EU’s Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) and the UN’s World Meteorological Service (WMO), details the impacts of global warming, including a “beyond extreme” marine heatwave off the UK and Irish coasts, the continent’s largest ever wildfire and exceptional glacier melt.

Heat-related deaths are on the rise in Europe, where it was found 63 lives were lost to storms, 44 to floods and 44 to wildfires in 2023.

Weather and climate-related economic losses totalled an estimated 13.4 billion euros (£11.5 billion), the report said.

Celeste Saulo, WMO secretary-general, said: “The climate crisis is the biggest challenge of our generation. The cost of climate action may seem high but the cost of inaction is much higher.”

Anomalies in the annual surface air temperature for European land.
Credit: Copernicus

https://www.itv.com/news/2024-04-22/death-drought-and-devastation-europe-faces-huge-number-of-climate-extremes

Continue ReadingDeath, drought and devastation: Europe faces ‘huge number’ of climate extremes, report finds

Genocide supporter Rishi Sunak tries to invert the argument

Spread the love

Uk Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and the barely notional UK Leader of the Opposition Labour Party leader Keir Starmer have been hugely supportive of Israel’s Gaza genocide. Three Youth Demand activists were arrested at Keir Starmer’s London home yesterday having put a banner on his fence and childrens’ shoes at the approach to his front door.

Youth Demand shoes at Starmer's home 9 April 2024. Image: Youth Demand.
Youth Demand shoes at Starmer’s home 9 April 2024. Image: Youth Demand.

Following these actions Sunak says

“I don’t care what your politics are, no MP should be harassed at their own home.

“We cannot and will not tolerate this.”

James Cleverly, the home secretary, said on X: “This is unacceptable. There is no excuse for harassing and intimidating politicians and their families in their homes.”

No, supporters of genocide and the mass murder of children Rishi Sunak and Keir Starmer that’s the protesters message to you: That they won’t tolerate you supporting Israel’s genocide in Gaza. Sunak and Starmer are supporting war crimes and genocide in Gaza. It is the public’s duty to oppose that. It’s everyone’s duty to oppose that.

Zionist Keir Starmer supports Israel's Gaza genocide.
Zionist Keir Starmer supports Israel’s Gaza genocide.

Response to Rishi Sunak's extremism speech at Downing Street 1 March 2024. Second version of this image with text slightly altered.
Response to Rishi Sunak’s extremism speech at Downing Street 1 March 2024. Second version of this image with text slightly altered.
Continue ReadingGenocide supporter Rishi Sunak tries to invert the argument

#Wokesconegate: Right-wingers mocked for meltdown over National Trust’s ‘vegan’ scones

Spread the love

https://leftfootforward.org/2024/04/wokesconegate-right-wingers-mocked-for-meltdown-over-national-trusts-vegan-scones/

‘To be fair – margarine was a French invention… although they probably don’t know that…’

The National Trust regularly finds itself in the right-wing firing line, as anti-woke insurgents attempt to present it as some kind of dangerously radical cake-and-countryside organisation.

This week, the cakes that Europe’s largest conservation charity serves in its hundreds of tearooms across the country, have literally been under attack.

The rant was initiated by the Daily Mail, which ran an ‘exclusive’ on the National Trust’s use of vegetable-based spread instead of butter in its scones. Customers are, according to the newspaper, complaining that the new scones taste like ‘dry biscuits.’

the assault on the Trust’s scones attracted ridicule, with a ‘wokesconegate’ hashtag trending.

Celia Richardson, the charity’s director of communications, joined the mockery, writing on X:

“GB News claims the National Trust ‘holds our heritage in contempt,’ over #wokesconegate. But margarine (which we’ve used in scones for decades) has been part of UK heritage since at least WW2. And am I alone in remembering Bruce Forsyth’s Stork SB challenge? Classic heritage TV!”

The fact that margarine was a creation of the French and not the British was also pointed out.

https://leftfootforward.org/2024/04/wokesconegate-right-wingers-mocked-for-meltdown-over-national-trusts-vegan-scones/

Continue Reading#Wokesconegate: Right-wingers mocked for meltdown over National Trust’s ‘vegan’ scones