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Head of UK border force Brodie Clark suspended | Head of UK border force Brodie Clark suspended |
(about 6 hours later) | |
The head of the UK border force has been suspended by the Home Office following claims some passport checks were not carried out during the summer. | |
Brodie Clark also sits on the board of the UK Border Agency, of which the border force is part. Two other UKBA officials have also been suspended. | Brodie Clark also sits on the board of the UK Border Agency, of which the border force is part. Two other UKBA officials have also been suspended. |
It is alleged staff were told to relax identity checks on non-EU nationals. | |
The Home Office is investigating. In July it said EU national checks could be reduced in "limited circumstances". | |
Senior UKBA official Graham Kyle, who is director of operations at Heathrow Airport, is one of the two others suspended. | |
Staff working for the UK border force are responsible for checking passports and conducting immigration raids. | Staff working for the UK border force are responsible for checking passports and conducting immigration raids. |
In a statement, the Home Office said ministers had agreed in July that EU nationals could have their biometric passport checked "upon the discretion of a UKBA official" instead of automatically. | |
In addition, European school children travelling with their families or in groups would not automatically be checked against watch-lists - known as the warnings index - aimed at flagging up those who may be "of interest" to the border agency. | |
The statement added: "Instead, Brodie Clark is alleged to have authorised UKBA officials to abandon biometric checks on non-EEA [European Economic Area] nationals, the verification of the fingerprints of non-EEA nationals and warnings index checks on adults at Calais." | |
BBC home affairs correspondent Tom Symonds said the mention of Calais referred only to the warnings index checks. The other checks were allegedly abandoned elsewhere. | |
'Incredulity and fury' | 'Incredulity and fury' |
Biometric passports contain a digital image of the holder's face which can be used to compare with the printed version and check the passport has not been forged. | Biometric passports contain a digital image of the holder's face which can be used to compare with the printed version and check the passport has not been forged. |
Home Secretary Theresa May's reaction to the developments was "incredulity and fury", a source told our correspondent. | |
Mr Clark was at first offered the opportunity of retiring by the UK Border Agency, but, following the intervention of the Home Office, was suspended pending an investigation. | Mr Clark was at first offered the opportunity of retiring by the UK Border Agency, but, following the intervention of the Home Office, was suspended pending an investigation. |
Two investigations have been ordered. Dave Wood, who heads the enforcement and crime group at the UKBA, will carry out a two-week inquiry designed to discover to what extent checks were scaled down and what the security implications might have been. | Two investigations have been ordered. Dave Wood, who heads the enforcement and crime group at the UKBA, will carry out a two-week inquiry designed to discover to what extent checks were scaled down and what the security implications might have been. |
Ex-MI6 official Mike Anderson, director general of the strategy, immigration and international group at the Home Office, will investigate wider issues relating to the performance of UKBA. | Ex-MI6 official Mike Anderson, director general of the strategy, immigration and international group at the Home Office, will investigate wider issues relating to the performance of UKBA. |
Our correspondent said one Home Office source had labelled the border agency a "massive problem". | |
'Extraordinary' | 'Extraordinary' |
Home Affairs Select Committee chairman Keith Vaz, who is also a Labour MP, said the suspensions were "extraordinary" because they involved such senior members of the UK Border Agency. | Home Affairs Select Committee chairman Keith Vaz, who is also a Labour MP, said the suspensions were "extraordinary" because they involved such senior members of the UK Border Agency. |
He said: "Only a day after the publication of our report, which concluded that the Border Agency continues to fail, we have this remarkable news. | He said: "Only a day after the publication of our report, which concluded that the Border Agency continues to fail, we have this remarkable news. |
"We will question the home secretary about this on Tuesday when she comes before the committee. If her answers do not satisfy us, I am sure the committee will want to conduct its own inquiry. | "We will question the home secretary about this on Tuesday when she comes before the committee. If her answers do not satisfy us, I am sure the committee will want to conduct its own inquiry. |
"The border police are supposed to keep people out, not let people in." | "The border police are supposed to keep people out, not let people in." |
The Home Affairs Select Committee report, published on Friday, found that 124,000 deportation cases had been shelved by the UKBA. | The Home Affairs Select Committee report, published on Friday, found that 124,000 deportation cases had been shelved by the UKBA. |
It said the cases had been "dumped" in an archive, with the agency giving up on them. | It said the cases had been "dumped" in an archive, with the agency giving up on them. |
The term "controlled archive" was used to try to hide the fact that it was a list of lost applicants, the MPs said. | The term "controlled archive" was used to try to hide the fact that it was a list of lost applicants, the MPs said. |
Ministers and the opposition blamed each other for the reported failings. | Ministers and the opposition blamed each other for the reported failings. |