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Setback for British ID plan

Members of the chamber voted 237 to 156 to force ministers to reveal the full cost of the plan before introducing it.

Updated on: Jan 17, 2006 12:28 PM IST
None | By , London
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The hotly disputed plan of the British government for a new national identity card system has suffered a serious setback after the upper House of Parliament, the Lords, voted to delay the Bill.

HT Image
HT Image

Members of the chamber voted 237 to 156 to force ministers to reveal the full cost of the plan — one of its most contentious aspects — before introducing it.

The move obliges Home Secretary Charles Clarke to make a report to Parliament giving a detailed account of costs versus expected benefits, which must then be approved by lawmakers.

Prime Minister Tony Blair's government could opt to reverse the decision through a vote in the more powerful lower chamber, the House of Commons, but such a move risks another potentially embarrassing defeat.

The plan to introduce identification cards carrying biometric details of the holder, initially on a voluntary basis starting around 2008, has been savaged by critics.

Although compulsory ID cards are routine in many other countries, Britain has had no such system since shortly after World War II, and opponents argue the cards are an unnecessary infringement of civil liberties,

Debate has also centred around the cost of the plan. The government estimates it at around one billion dollars per year, but a report by London School of Economics experts said it could end up costing more than three times as much.

 
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