Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Germany: Thieves steal hundreds of IDs, including passports

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A heavy safe with hundreds of new ID cards and passports was stolen in east Germany, authoritie­s have said. The thieves also took two finger-scanning devices.

Thieves stole hundreds of identity documents, including passports, when they took a safe from a German city registrati­on office, police said on Wednesday.

Deputy mayor of the eastern German city of Kothen, Stephanie Behrendt, said "many hundreds of new identity cards and passports" had been in the lifted safe, which weighed 750 kilograms (1,650 pounds).

The city of 27,000 told residents awaiting issue of their identity documents that their stolen IDs had been disabled electronic­ally, federal authoritie­s had listed them as stolen and unusable, and new ones would be issued.

Palm-sized identity cards in Germany, known as Personalau­sweise, normally have electronic chips storing identity details, including the holder's fingerprin­t.

Köthen's Mayor Bernd Hauschild apologized in a letter to affected residents over the inconvenie­nce, also urging vigilance because city uniforms had also been stolen, Mitteldeut­she Zeitung

(MZ) newspaper reported.

Also stolen, said Behrendt, were devices such as two fingerprin­t scanners and a printer normally used by the registry office to generate temporary identifica­tion. Saxony- Anhalt police are investigat­ing the case and told German news agency DPA that unknown perpetrato­rs had entered city administra­tion offices in Kothen, which was once home to composer Johann Sebastian Bach.

Mayor Hauschild acknowledg­ed that the registry office lacked both an alarm system and surveillan­ce cameras focused on the safe, in comments to MZ.

"Until now that had not been necessary," said Hauschild, insisting, however, that identity-document storage in the safe had met security specificat­ions.

Last weekend's theft coincided with AFAR, a San Franciscob­ased travel magazine, posting Tuesday that one of several world indices sees Germany as having "the most powerful passport in the world" with visa-free access to 134 destinatio­ns — despite the coronaviru­s.

 ??  ?? Unidentifi­ed thieves stole a safe full of newly printed passports
Unidentifi­ed thieves stole a safe full of newly printed passports

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