Weather Tonight: 8°c Light showers Morning: 13°c Light showers

Critics' Choice

Film

Andrew O'Hagan

quoteAn awesome and ridiculous film that leaves you thrilled beyond the point of your natural endurancequote

Andrew O'Hagan 2012 Theatre

Fiona Mountford

quoteThe show has suddenly become quite wonderful, and the galvanising factor is the terrific stage debut of Melanie Cquote

Fiona Mountford Blood Brothers Music

John Aizlewood

quoteThe British pop music industry may be eating itself but if Muse are the pick of what it can offer the world in 2010 then British music is in rude health indeedquote

John Aizlewood Muse

Reader reviews

Theatre

Rachel Dalziel

quoteI was smitten by both Gilberts enormous luxuriant moustache and the intelligence and nuance of this highly entertaining playquote

Gilbert Is Dead Restaurants

Raja, London

quoteI totally recommend Babbo to anyone who is looking for really good and traditional Italian foodquote

Babbo Music

Katy, London

quoteAlways been a fan but never seen them live. I was ecstatic to be part of this epic event. WOW!quote

Muse

Brits to be grilled in 30-minute interviews to qualify for passports

Last updated at 08:37am on 21.03.07

 Add your view

 

            passport

Passport applicants could soon be quizzed for 30 minutes to qualify

British citizens will be quizzed on up to 200 different pieces of personal information in a 30-minute grilling if they want a passport, it has been revealed.

From May, thousands of applicants will be forced to travel 20 miles or more - at their own expense - to attend one of the interviews.

The application process, which will cause huge inconvenience to holidaymakers, will take up to six weeks and involve at least 700 civil servants in a huge logistical exercise which threatens to descend into chaos.

Those who fail to convince the bureaucrats they are who they say will be denied a travel document - or face a full investigation by antifraud experts. There is no formal appeal process.

Critics have likened the new system to an 'interrogation' and warned that it will prove intimidating to many law-abiding members of the public.

It will also fuel alarm over the emergence of a 'Big Brother Britain', in which the Government holds detailed information about everybody living here.

The details an applicant will be questioned on include sensitive financial information, such as bank account details and mortgage applications purchased by the Government from a credit-checking company.

Officials at the Identity and Passport Service defended the requirement for applicants to undergo the 30-minute interview process, comprising 20 minutes of questioning and ten minutes of form-filling.

They say it will reduce the number of passports handed over to fraudsters and terrorists each year - a figure which currently stands at 10,000.

The process will begin as soon as a person applies in writing for a passport. Initially, the new regime will apply to around 600,000 first-time applicants each year - but is likely to be extended to everybody wanting a document by 2009. To deal with the 600,000 applicants involves the appointment of 700 extra civil servants - 600 to carry out the interviews and 100 managers.

With 6.6million applications processed every year, extending the face-to-face interview to all applicants would require up to 7,000 staff.

Once the application arrives, officials will begin compiling a 'biographical footprint', containing 200 different pieces of personal information. It will be drawn from Government records, birth and marriage certificates and - most controversially - material purchased by the IPS from one of the UK's

The bill for buying the personal data from Equifax is one of the main reasons why the passport fee has rocketed to £66. As recently as December 2005, it cost only £42.

Bernard Herdan, executive director of the IPS, said the information would include previous and current addresses, how long they have lived there, who with, whether they have a mortgage, and any bank accounts which may be held.

Details of a person's ancestors, family background and any credit cards applied for are also likely to be included.

Once the 'footprint' is complete, the applicant will be invited to attend one of 69 interview offices due to open across the UK. They will not be open in the evening, forcing most people with jobs to attend on a Saturday. The smallest offices will open only two and a half days a week.

Initially, Ministers claimed that over half of the population would be within 15 minutes of an office. Yesterday, officials conceded this was a crude estimate. Instead, they said most people would be within 20 miles - with travel costs to be paid by the applicant.

Once there, the interview will take place, with civil servants bombarding the would-be holidaymaker with questions from their 'footprint'.

Mr Herdan said there would be no pass or fail mark. Instead, the official will be attempting to get an overall picture of whether the person is who they say.

Those rejected must write to the IPS to ask for the case to be reconsidered, or ask an MP or ombudsman to take up the matter.

Even those who are successful are told to expect the process to take as long as six weeks, compared with three or four at present. The fast-track service, for people who desperately need a document within a week, has been scrapped altogether for first-time applicants.

Mr Herdan insisted the interview process was not meant to be 'daunting', but to weed out fraudulent applications.

Critics, however, said the checks would impose a huge burden on the public in order to catch a tiny percentage of people to obtain fraudulent documents. The 10,000 figure constitutes only 0.15 per cent of the 6.6 million passports issued each year. They suggested the Government's real motive was to gather as much personal data as possible, ahead of the introduction of controversial ID cards in 2009.

Tory immigration spokesman Damian Green said: "These interviews will do plenty to inconvenience the ordinary law-abiding British traveller. They will do very little to stop terrorists obtaining even more fraudulent passports."

Phil Booth, of the NO2ID campaign, said of the 10,000 fraudulent applications: "Assuming it is even vaguely right, then the Identity and Passport Service plans to add hundreds to the price of a family holiday, inconvenience and intimidate millions of lawabiding people, and spend billions of pounds - all to tackle a problem that affects just 0.15 per cent of all passports issued."

He added: "No-one should be fooled - the interrogation system is for the ID card scheme."

Ministers have already ruled anybody who refuses to let their details go on the ID cards database will be banned from having a passport from 2009.


Bookmark and Share
 
 

Reader views (10)

 Add your view

This country is just getting more and more brilliant (sarcasm)! They do nothing to stop illegal immigrants flooding into this country yet, they make it harder for their own citizens to live in their own country!

This will not stop any problems the UK has with immigration! This country
is just doing there own citizens up the backside! Well done, it's bad enough our taxes go towards unbeneficial things and the NHS is in trouble, now they
want to make its own citizen's lives hell!

- Johny, Surrey

If you don't already have your passport then it's too late to leave the country without being micro-chipped. Passports now have a radio chip in them that can be conveniently scanned and used for tracking you.

Oh, and don't try protesting about it because the face-recognition software that relies on the new non-smiley passport photos will will be used to add that fact to your database record too. Once marked as a trouble-maker you might find it hard to cross the border anyway.

Maybe there will soon be a market for smuggling people out of the UK...

- Paul, Switzerland

I agree that this will cause a big hassle but it might stop another big hassle, that is the tracking down and arresting of many foreign criminals. Of course, this all depends on the effectiveness of the people involved in running the system. We wait and see what will actually happen.

- John Evans, London, U.K.

So they're going to use bank account and mortgage details to conform someone's identity? And those accounts have been obtained by showing a passport, driving licence, NI number, birth certificate or untility bill, any of which can be fake. Someone without a mortgage, driving licence or credit card won't have to give as much information as someone who has. The whole system is crazy! Oh, and not forgetting the "travelling to interviews" nonsense. Yeah, it may be 20 mins by car, but by public transport? If you want to decrease passport fraud, make birth certificates "ex-directory" so that only the individual or someone nominated by them can get a copy.

- Clare, UK

Sorry, you're subjects not citizens of the Empire. May be that's the roots of your problems?

- Joe, Va. USA

So some jobsworth can refuse to issue you with a passport just because he doesn't believe you are who you say you are.

Welcome to the Police State.

- Jerry, Edgware, Uk

Talk about closing the door after the horse has bolted! Too little too late.

- Charlie, London

Labour should be renamed the Waste, Mismanagement and Spying Party. They tax us at stupidly high rates and throw away the money on adding more and more layers of wasteful, intrusive bureaucracy.

My morgage is not the governments business, neither is my bank account, my lifestyle or my family history.

I'm a British citizen - the government is in place to serve British citizens, not the other way round. I should not have to jump through hoops to obtain a document to which I'm legally entitled.

In addition, with the current crisis regarding identity theft, do we really want this government knowing everything. They're not exactly known for air tight security.

VOTE LABOUR OUT.

- Tobin, Andover

How did the come up with the figure of ten thousand? How did they count them? If they know how many, they must know which... then it should not be too difficult to cancel those passports, and have a black list held at airports and ports of entry and exit...

- Beatriz, London

Typical draconian government response to cover up their own incompetence and another excuse to employ another 700 civil servants. Time to leave he country before we all get micro-chipped.

- Ray, London UK


Add your comment

 

Your email address will not be published

Terms and conditions make text area bigger You have  characters left.


 
 


 
 
London's Weather
Tonight
Light showers
8°c
Morning
Light showers
13°c
5 day forecast
 
 

Daily Mail Mail on Sunday Travel Mail This is Money Metro

Loot | Jobsite | Homes & property | London jobs | FindaProperty.com | Primelocation.com | Educate London | Holiday Villas