Asked by Lord Harris of Haringey To ask Her Majesty’s
Government when they will authorise the use of public alert
technology for mobile phone systems for use by the police and
emergency services in the event of a terrorist incident. Lord Young
of Cookham (Con) My Lords, the Cabinet Office has been
requested to provide Ministers with advice...Request free trial
Asked by
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To ask Her Majesty’s Government when they will authorise
the use of public alert technology for mobile phone systems
for use by the police and emergency services in the event
of a terrorist incident.
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(Con)
My Lords, the Cabinet Office has been requested to provide
Ministers with advice from the police and other emergency
services about the scenarios where a national alerting
scheme could improve public protection. An initial analysis
of what a scheme might look like and what delivering a
scheme might entail is scheduled for May 2018.
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(Lab)
My Lords, I am grateful to the Minister for that reply, if
somewhat bemused by it. Three trials were organised by the
Cabinet Office and conducted in 2013, which is nearly five
years ago. There was then a report from the Cabinet Office
saying that the trials had been extremely successful, and
it made a series of recommendations. Why is it taking so
long to implement a scheme that could save lives by
alerting people to an emergency and to the advice of the
emergency services?
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I begin by commending the noble Lord on the report he did
for the Mayor of London, which had a number of
recommendations —127—on how better to deal with terrorism,
of which this was one. I reassure the noble Lord that the
Cabinet Office is taking this seriously; I had a meeting
with officials this morning at which I set out a timetable
for the next phase in this approach. I agree with him that
there is a real potential to reduce harm to people and
mitigate damage to property if we make progress with a
national alerting scheme, but there are some real
issues—technical, political and administrative—that need to
be addressed before we can make progress with the scheme.
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(Con)
Does my noble friend accept that when there were attacks on
London transport, what the police actually did was to
switch everybody’s mobiles off in case they were used to
trigger another device? Does that not bring into question
how useful it would be to put this alert out on mobiles
which might, at that stage, be switched off?
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Any progress will of course be made after consultation with
the police, but my understanding is that that problem can
be overcome. Basically, what we are looking at is the
reverse of a 999 scheme: instead of the citizen telephoning
the emergency services and asking for help, the emergency
services contact the citizen and give the citizen advice.
There is real potential to avoid damage to individuals and
to property if the scheme is worked up, but there are some
issues that need to be addressed before we can make
progress with a trial.
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(LD)
My Lords, can the Minister tell us what network providers
have been contacted about this and whether they have agreed
to carry out this system?
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The noble Baroness is quite right that this would need the
co-operation of the communication providers and, indeed,
Ofcom. My understanding is that after initial discussions
they are willing to take part in such a service: that is
not one of the obstacles we envisage in our way.
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(Lab)
My Lords, the Minister has not answered my noble friend’s
first question: why has it taken five years to get not very
far and when is it going to be complete?
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The noble Lord is quite right that some work was done a few
years ago—I think in 2014—but at that stage it was decided
not to make progress. Progress was reignited by the report
done by the noble Lord, , and the
correspondence with the Mayor’s Office and the Cabinet
Office. As a result of that, progress is now being made. I
accept what the noble Lord has said about a possible delay.
We think the scheme has potential and we are working it up.
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(GP)
My Lords, did the Minister’s meeting this morning have
anything to do with the fact that the Question of the noble
Lord, Lord Harris, was coming up this afternoon?
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The meeting I had this morning was precisely because the
noble Lord, Lord Harris, had a Question, which he put to
me. However, the work was in hand and if the noble Baroness
looks at the progress report—which I think came out last
October, following the noble Lord’s report—it said:
“Engagement is continuing between City Hall, the Cabinet
Office and other partners on this work. MOPAC”—
which is the Mayor’s Office for Policing and Crime—
“will continue to work with central government to make the
case for a trial in London of the technology suggested in
Lord Harris’ review”.
So it is not the case that nothing was happening before the
noble Lord tabled his Question.
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(Lab)
But, my Lords, I think it is almost a lack of progress
report rather than a progress report. I am greatly
encouraged that my noble friend Lord Harris put this on the
table today; otherwise, the Minister might not have had the
meeting at the Cabinet Office this morning. I put it to him
that other countries seem to have resolved these issues:
the US in 2012, and Australia has had a similar system
since 2009, as, indeed, has the Netherlands. I ask him to
reflect that this is about alerting people not just to
terrorist incidents, but to the lack of an incident. He
will recall two incidents last year when there were
stampedes at Oxford Street station because misinformation
went out. The sooner such information can get to people as
quickly as possible, the sooner we can stop disinformation
and the kind of injuries we saw in those two incidents. So
I urge that we have a progress report as soon as possible,
rather than a lack of progress report.
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I hope I was able to reassure noble Lords that progress is
now being made. I accept the implied criticism that we
could have got here a little sooner. There is the
potential, as the noble Baroness has just said, to avoid
the sorts of incidents that she mentioned. There is also an
opportunity to use technology in a way that it is not used
in other countries at the moment, I think, which is why we
are looking at a slightly different scheme; for example, in
the case of the attempted murder in Salisbury, with a
modern system it would have been possible to identify
anyone with a mobile phone who had been in an area of
contamination at the relevant time and send them a specific
message. This is new technology and we want to make sure
that if we go ahead, we use all the benefits that modern IT
provides.
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(Lab)
My Lords, can the Minister say what political issues are
delaying the introduction of this technology?
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Well, there is the issue of whether somebody should have
the right to send a message to somebody on their mobile
phone—whether or not they want to receive it. There are
those sorts of issues.
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Noble Lords
Oh!
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Well, some people may not want to get a message. There are
other issues about who would be in control of the system:
the police or the other emergency services? There are some
technical and administrative issues that need to be
addressed.
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Lord (CB)
Following up the particular point about data of the
individual, bearing in mind the recent arrangements over
personal data protection, will it be essential that
individuals agree that they may be approached by this reverse
999 system?
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No, the system the Government are looking at is not one you
would have to opt in to, as with many of the existing
systems. You would get messages automatically, which is why I
think it raises some of the issues touched on in the previous
answer.
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(Lab)
Does the Minister agree that the problems he has outlined are
very large compared with the technological problems
associated with introducing identity cards? Will he come
forward with at least the same enthusiasm on identity cards
in the future?
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I hate to disappoint the noble Lord but the introduction of
ID cards is not on the Government’s agenda at the moment, nor
do I think it will be in the near future.
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(Lab)
My Lords, what advice does the Civil Contingencies
Secretariat now give to households in case of emergencies?
Until about 10 years ago quite detailed advice was given. Has
this been updated recently and what provisions, et cetera,
should households have in place should there be a crisis,
particularly something affecting cyber and delivery, for
example?
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I may need to write to the noble Lord on that and how it
relates to the civil contingencies unit. In some parts of the
country there are arrangements whereby if there is an
emergency, the landlines of those who live in the immediate
vicinity are automatically contacted and they are given a
message. But I would like to do some more work on the
specific question the noble Lord asked and then write to him.
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