By Nigel Morris, Home Affairs Correspondent
A civil liberties storm erupted yesterday after a senior judge called
for the genetic details of every person in Britain, and all visitors to
the country, to be added to the national DNA database. Critics warned
that the "chilling" move would infringe privacy, be hugely impractical
and have only a marginal impact on crime.
Downing Street and the Home Office, which have been accused of moving
Britain towards a surveillance society, distanced themselves from Lord
Justice Sedley's controversial suggestion without entirely ruling it
out.
About 4.1 million samples are already on the database, almost 7 per
cent of the population and far more than in any other Western country.
Police can take DNA from anyone arrested, regardless of whether they
are eventually charged.
But Sir Stephen Sedley, one of the most experienced Court of Appeal
judges, protested that there were "indefensible" anomalies in the
system, including disproportionate numbers of people from ethnic
minorities on the database.
He said: "We have a situation where if you happen to have been in the
hands of the police, your DNA is permanently on record and if you
haven't, it isn't."
The judge told the BBC that the remedy could be to place every person
on the database, as well as the 32 million annual foreign visitors to
the country, for the "absolutely rigorously restricted purpose of crime
detection and prevention".
He acknowledged that the creation of a universal database had very
serious implications, but argued that it ultimately led to a fairer
system.
Tony Blair said last year that he could see no reason why the DNA of
everyone should not ultimately be kept on record.
Gordon Brown's official spokesman said the Government had no plans to
introduce a compulsory database, and stressed the logistical and
bureaucratic problems, and the civil liberties concerns, surrounding
such a move.
Tony McNulty, the Home Office minister, said he was broadly sympathetic
to the "real logic" of the judge's argument. But he stressed: "There is
no government plan to go to a compulsory database now or in the
foreseeable future."
Nick Clegg, the Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman, accused the
Government of a "cloak-and-dagger strategy of creating a universal
database behind the backs of the British people".
David Davis, the shadow Home Secretary, called for a parliamentary
debate on the issue. He said: "The erratic nature of this database
means that some criminals have escaped having their DNA recorded whilst
a third of those people on the database – over a million people – have
never been convicted of a crime."
Shami Chakrabarti, director of the human rights organisation Liberty,
said a database of DNA from convicted sexual and violent offenders was
a "perfectly sensible crime-fighting measure".
But she added: "A database of every man, woman and child in the country
is a chilling proposal, ripe for indignity, error and abuse."
The DNA database, created in 1995, is growing by 30,000 samples a
month. It contains the profiles of 884,000 children, including more
than 100 who are less than 10 years old.
The Home Office is currently reviewing the Police and Criminal Evidence
Act 1984, which sets out the powers to take and retain biometric data.
It will consider whether records should only be held temporarily for
minor offenders and people who are not charged.
The Home Office said last night that the database provides police with
an average of 3,500 matches each month.
Originall
Source
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