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Identity Cards
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.On the radio this morning I heard the claim that identity cards would've helped in the arrest of Kamel Bourgass (the Ricin terrorist) and thought how daft surely he wouldn't have carried a real card - then I realised -this isn't about cards this is about fingerprinting ( and/or retinal scaning ) the entire population and recording it on a database. The cards are merely there to enforce it and make sure everybody is processed. - If they can get away with it they'll enforce a DNA sample too.
I'd imagine you'll have to be done if you apply for a passport renewal.
I guess whether you think these things are a good idea depends on how much you trust the police and criminal justice system and how afraid you are of crime.
One of the bigger issues is whether or not it becomes mandatory to carry one.
Ever gone to the shops and found you left your wallet in your other trousers? If carrying an ID card becomes mandatory you will be committing a criminal offence.
Be fun if you have your wallet stolen too! presumably that won't be an excuse wonder how long it'll take to get a replacement?
I have a Belgian ID card and have no problem about carrying it with me all the time. If you lose it, you go to the police and they do a declaration of loss/theft etc. This document will do to cover you for the time it takes you to get to the Commune and request a new one. In the Commune where I live, they will do this for you straight away.
If, in future, British ex-pats will get a UK ID card, that's fine by me and it will probably replace the passport for travel with in the EU.
Are you aware that the US authorities want biometric data to be put on passports so that you can benefit from the visa waiver scheme:
"The US Government has legislated that anyone travelling to the US under the Visa Waiver Programme with a passport issued on or after 26 October 2005, will have to have a biometric passport in order to travel visa free. Biometric passports will contain data about the holder�s face, and may also contain other unique personal information such as fingerprints and iris details. The UK is working on its programme to introduce biometric passports, but it will not be fully ready in time for the 26 October 2005 deadline. British Citizens who would normally travel under the VWP may therefore require a visa, which will include biometric data, to enter the US on or after 26 October 2005, if their passport is issued after that date and is not biometric."
I have a major problem with having to carry one at all times. - I think most other people would too after a year of so of it - The Spanish situation sounds pretty awfull.
I also am somewhat worried about mistakes/identity theft. Just think about what could happen to you if I went along to the police said I were you and that I'd lost my ID card and got one with some dodgy ID.
Of course that sort of thing wont happen because this system will be up and running flawlessly in no time at all won't it?
I must say I know half of you don't trust Tony Blair to tie his own shoelaces yet you seem totally happy to trust him to set up an identity monitorring system.
As I am not a Belgian citizen, but am resident in Belgium, my ID card is, in fact, a "Carte de S�jour de Ressortissant d'un Etat Membre de la C.E.E.". It is not the same as the ID cards held by Belgian citizens.
It has a photo, name, address, birth place and date, civil status, nationality, sex and National Insurance number on it together with my signature.
Here, the police can require you to produce it but, if you don't have it with you, you just have to produce it at a police station within a certain time. You always need it for "official" things such as picking up a package from the post office etc.
I think that, in places where you can be arrested for not having it with you, unless the police suspect you of some offence, you are unlikely to be arrested because it would be more trouble than it's worth for them. This is likely to be scaremongering from the anti-ID-card people.
People might grumble about it, but it works fine.
I think the fundamental difference here is simply that you trust the Police and I don't.
Right now in the UK we have the Devon and Cornwall Police investigating the Surrey Police's inquiry into the Deepcut Barrack deaths and that's just what's going on now. If we go back a few years we have the West Midlands serious crime squad, Motorway police playing car snooker ( pulling cars based on their colour ) etc. etc.
I don't want to abolish the Police but I certainly don't see them as a heroic thin blue line between us and anarchy and I no more want to put identity cards in their hands than I want to give my eleven year old son an air rifle.
For the same reason - I don't trust either to use it responsibly.
Maybe I'll start a "Who trusts the Police" thread next week.
Trust the police? I think not - here they are (allegedly) more corrupt than yours can ever be but they won't put up with any nonsense - we have no choice if we want to live here ( I am talking specifically of Ibiza - which prides itself on being different from the mainland - and before you ask yes they can have different laws). Obviously there are some good trustworthy ones - but on the whole they are a bigheaded "look at me I'm important"lot - but I've been here 34yrs and was a hippie and rebel and I've got on OK - once they know your face they pretty much leave you alone - but lots of the police get changed over regularly between here and the mainland to stop this . The occasional grovel pays dividends.