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The former defence secretary says erring on the side of caution was "entirely justified" after the 2022 breach.
The revelation of a major data leak and subsequent relocation of thousands of Afghans to the UK has raised serious questions.
Details of more than 100 British officials were in the data, which may have fallen into the hands of the Taliban.
On the face of it, the Afghan data breach is very bad indeed. It is arguably the worst leak of secret UK government names ...
But relatives of Afghans named in the leak told the BBC that they fear for their family still in the country, with one saying ...
Britain has secretly offered asylum to nearly 24,000 Afghan soldiers and their families caught up in the most serious data ...
Afghans who worked with UK forces left behind after the fall of Kabul and affected by the breach call on the UK to evacuate ...
A former British Paratrooper who spent more than a decade serving in numerous operations across Afghanistan has warned that ...
The breach exposed the details of Afghan nationals and compromised the personal information of over 100 British officials.
A MP has written to Defence Secretary John Healey about accommodation for thousands of Afghans resettled in the UK after a major data leak ...
Bad decisions and mistakes by governments should result, not in cover-ups, but in those responsible being held to account ...
UK politicians had tried to keep the Afghan data leak a secret, RTE's Tommy Meskill looks at the reasons behind this.
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