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UK politicians had tried to keep the Afghan data leak a secret, RTE's Tommy Meskill looks at the reasons behind this.
The Observer on MSN3hOpinion
Keep calm – and cover up?
It took 18 months to raise the alarm over a ministry of defence data leak which named 19,000 Afghans and more than 100 ...
Use of secure rooms and secrecy classifications may have been ignored in government-wide emails during chaotic Kabul evacuation ...
The MoD says it will 'robustly defend' against large compensation claims from Afghans affected by the data breach, and won't ...
Hundreds of UK ministry of defence (MoD) data breaches have been revealed as questions intensify over its ability to keep ...
Grant Shapps claims he was ‘surprised’ gagging order was in place for ‘so long’ – despite fighting to keep superinjunction in ...
Germany has successfully deported 81 Afghan nationals to Kabul through a landmark "indirect agreement" with the Taliban. A returns flight left Leipzig airport early on Friday morning carrying Afghan ...
A former British Paratrooper who spent more than a decade serving in numerous operations across Afghanistan has warned that ...
Downing Street has defended John Healey amid accusations he misled Parliament over the Afghan data leak that resulted in an ...
In one incident last year, the names and bank details of 272,000 staff were breached when one of its systems was hacked ...
On 15 July, the High Court lifted a super-injunction that had concealed the scale - or even the existence - of a major data ...
Sir Grant Shapps has defended his decision to keep an unprecedented legal gagging order in place over the Afghan data leak ...