By Sam Tobin and Andrew MacAskill
LONDON (Reuters) -Britain set up a secret scheme to bring thousands of Afghans to the UK after their personal details were disclosed in a data leak, putting them at risk of reprisals from the Taliban after their return to power, court documents showed on Tuesday.
Concerns that individuals named could be targeted by the Taliban led the previous Conservative government to set up the relocation scheme, involving thousands of people and estimated to cost the government about 2 billion pounds ($2.7 billion).
The leak by the Ministry of Defence in early 2022, which saw data published on Facebook the following year, and the secret relocation programme were subject to a so-called superinjunction preventing the media reporting what happened, which was lifted on Tuesday.
British defence minister John Healey apologised for the leak, which included details about members of parliament and senior military officers who supported applications to help soldiers who worked with the British military and their families relocate to the UK from Afghanistan.
“This serious data incident should never have happened,” Healey told lawmakers in the House of Commons. ”It may have occurred three years ago under the previous government, but to all whose data was compromised I offer a sincere apology.”
The incident ranks among the worst security breaches in modern British history because of the cost and risk posed to the lives of thousands of Afghans, some of whom fought alongside British forces until their chaotic withdrawal in 2021.
Healey said about 4,500 Afghans and their family members have been relocated or are on their way to Britain under the previously secret scheme at a cost of around 400 million pounds.
But he added that no-one else from Afghanistan will be offered asylum because of the data leak, citing a government review which found little evidence of intent from the Taliban to conduct a campaign of retribution against former officials.
News of the leak comes as Britain’s public finances are tight and the right-wing, anti-immigration Reform UK political party leads in the opinion polls.
British forces were first deployed to Afghanistan in 2001 following the September 11 attacks on the United States, and they played a major role in combat operations there until 2014.
The government is facing lawsuits from those affected by the breach, further adding to the ultimate cost of the incident.
SUPERINJUNCTION LIFTED
A Ministry of Defence-commissioned review of the data breach, a summary of which was also published on Tuesday, said more than 16,000 people affected by it had been relocated to the UK as of May this year, though some of those affected had been relocated to the UK under existing schemes.
The superinjunction was first granted in 2023 after the Ministry of Defence argued that a public disclosure of the breach could put people at risk of extra-judicial killing or serious violence by the Taliban.
The dataset contained personal information of nearly 19,000 Afghans who had applied to be relocated to Britain and their families. A High Court said in a summary of its ruling to lift the injunction that the data “contained personal information about more than 33,000 applicants”.
The former Conservative government obtained the injunction the following month.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s centre-left government, which was elected last July, launched a review into the injunction, the breach and the relocation scheme.
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(Reporting by Sam Tobin, Andrew MacAskill, Kate Holton, editing by Hugh Lawson, Alexandra Hudson)