MoD admits loss of 747 laptops and secret data
By Michael Holden
LONDON (Reuters) - The Ministry of Defence said on Friday more than twice as many laptops had been lost or stolen in the last four years than previously thought, along with 121 computer memory sticks, some containing secret information.
This is the latest revelation about lost data which has caused embarrassment to Prime Minister Gordon Brown's government and led to accusations of incompetence from political opponents.
In a written parliamentary answer, Defence Secretary Des Browne said 747 laptops had been stolen or lost from the MoD in the last four years, 400 more than originally reported.
Of these, only 32 had been recovered.
That came a day after Armed Forces Minister Bob Ainsworth gave a written statement to parliament in which he said 121 USB memory devices, five of which contained secret data, had gone astray in the last four years.
"It seems that this government simply cannot be trusted with keeping sensitive information safe," said Liberal Democrat MP Sarah Teather who submitted the question about memory sticks.
"It is frightening to think that secret MoD information can be lost or stolen. This shows a shocking degree of incompetence across the entire government."
In January, the MoD admitted a Royal Navy officer's laptop had been stolen containing the personal details of up to 600,000 people. Continued...




