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Thousands of Afghans brought to Britain in secrecy after data leak

Published:Wednesday | July 16, 2025 | 12:10 AM
Britain’s Prime Minister David Cameron delivers a speech to British and US troops during a visit to Camp Bastion, outside Lashkar Gah, the provincial capital of Helmand province in south Afghanistan on July 4, 2011.
Britain’s Prime Minister David Cameron delivers a speech to British and US troops during a visit to Camp Bastion, outside Lashkar Gah, the provincial capital of Helmand province in south Afghanistan on July 4, 2011.

LONDON (AP):

Thousands of Afghans, including many who worked with British forces, have been secretly resettled in the UK after a leak of data on their identities raised fears that the Taliban could target them, the British government revealed on Tuesday.

The government said it is closing the programme, which a rare court order had barred the media from disclosing.

“To all those whose information was compromised, I offer a sincere apology today,” Defence Secretary John Healey said in the House of Commons. He said he regretted the secrecy and “have felt deeply concerned about the lack of transparency to Parliament and the public”.

Healey told lawmakers that a spreadsheet containing the personal information of nearly 19,000 people who had applied to come to Britain after the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan was accidentally released in 2022 because of a defence official’s email error. The government only became aware of the leak when some of the data was published on Facebook 18 months later.

The then Conservative government sought a court order barring disclosure of the leak, in an attempt to prevent the personal information being made public any further. The High Court issued an order, known as a super injunction, that barred anyone from revealing its existence.

The government then set up a secret programme to resettle the Afghans judged to be at greatest threat from the country’s Taliban rulers.

The injunction was lifted on Tuesday in conjunction with a decision by Britain’s current Labour Party government to make the programme public.

It said an independent review had found little evidence that the leaked data would expose Afghans to a greater risk of retribution from the Taliban. The review said the Taliban had other sources of information on those who had worked with the previous Afghan government and international forces, and in any case was more concerned with curent threats to its authority.

Some 4,500 Afghans — 900 applicants and approximately 3,600 family members — have been brought to Britain under the programme, and about 6,900 people are expected to be relocated by the time it closes, at a total cost of about 850 million pounds (US$1.1 billion).

Around 36,000 Afghans have been relocated to the UK under other resettlement routes since 2021.

Critics say that still leaves thousands of people who helped British troops as interpreters or in other roles at risk of torture, imprisonment or death.