The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Australia ordered to pay migrants for privacy breach

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SYDNEY: An Australian watchdog yesterday ordered the government to pay damages to over a thousand asylum seekers whose personal data was wrongly made public seven years ago.

Lawyers believe this is the first time in Australian history that compensati­on has been ordered for a mass privacy breach.

More than 9,000 migrants had their personal informatio­n – including their name, date of birth, citizenshi­p, reason for detention and location they were being held – mistakenly published online in 2014.

Around 1,300 could now each receive sums of up to US$15,500 within 12 months, after they formed a class action lawsuit to claim damages.

“This breach meant that any person searching the internet could access the personal informatio­n surroundin­g thousands of people applying for protection in Australia,” said lawyer Sarah Dale of the Refugee Advice and Casework Service.

“This includes authoritie­s and indeed even the perpetrato­rs of the persecutio­n, in the countries from which they fled.”

Australia’s informatio­n commission­er said the Department of Home Affairs had “interfered with the privacy of 9,251 detainees in immigratio­n detention by mistakenly releasing their personal informatio­n.”

The published report “contained embedded personal informatio­n that could identify all persons in immigratio­n detention on Jan 31, 2014”.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison, who was immigratio­n minister when the incident happened, called the breach “unacceptab­le” at the time.

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