Thousands of British families facing food bank queues due to 'flawed' Home Office travel data have called for an urgent inquiry into how they were wrongly stripped of child benefit.
Conservative MP Andrew Snowden has condemned the government's anti-fraud benefits crackdown, saying that thousands of innocent parents had their essential payments suspended because of unreliable or incomplete travel data. He warned that the system was not only flawed but also "unacceptable", leaving families struggling to pay rent and even miss meals.
The issue came to light after HMRC revealed it had wrongly suspended child benefit from 23,500 families based on faulty Home Office data, which claimed some parents were going on holidays and failing to return. The Guardian and investigative website The Detail reported that many innocent families had been caught up in the crackdown, including those who had fled war zones like Ukraine.
John Vine, a former chief inspector of borders and immigration, has raised concerns about broader weaknesses in the UK's entry and exit recording systems, warning that the flaws may have implications beyond benefit claimants. He called on the home secretary to take action to address these issues urgently.
Experts say the Home Office used passenger name record data, which was originally intended for counter-terrorism and serious crime purposes, to flag suspicious cases. However, the use of this data has expanded in recent years, a phenomenon known as "function creep".
As families struggle to make ends meet due to the suspension of their child benefit payments, critics are demanding answers from the government about how this system was authorised and how it will be fixed. The issue highlights the need for greater transparency and accountability in the use of sensitive data by government agencies.
Conservative MP Andrew Snowden has condemned the government's anti-fraud benefits crackdown, saying that thousands of innocent parents had their essential payments suspended because of unreliable or incomplete travel data. He warned that the system was not only flawed but also "unacceptable", leaving families struggling to pay rent and even miss meals.
The issue came to light after HMRC revealed it had wrongly suspended child benefit from 23,500 families based on faulty Home Office data, which claimed some parents were going on holidays and failing to return. The Guardian and investigative website The Detail reported that many innocent families had been caught up in the crackdown, including those who had fled war zones like Ukraine.
John Vine, a former chief inspector of borders and immigration, has raised concerns about broader weaknesses in the UK's entry and exit recording systems, warning that the flaws may have implications beyond benefit claimants. He called on the home secretary to take action to address these issues urgently.
Experts say the Home Office used passenger name record data, which was originally intended for counter-terrorism and serious crime purposes, to flag suspicious cases. However, the use of this data has expanded in recent years, a phenomenon known as "function creep".
As families struggle to make ends meet due to the suspension of their child benefit payments, critics are demanding answers from the government about how this system was authorised and how it will be fixed. The issue highlights the need for greater transparency and accountability in the use of sensitive data by government agencies.