E-Borders to be 'voluntary'
- Mon, 4 Jan 2010
- Comments (5)
The controversial e-Borders scheme in which yachtsmen faced heavy fines and even imprisonment for failing to provide 'crew data' is now likely to be run on a voluntary basis, the Home Office told Yachting Monthly today.
Yachtsmen who offered their personal details to the UK Border Agency before a voyage are likely to be left alone, the spokeswoman said. Those who do not will naturally be of more interest to the five high-speed cutters which will patrol the country's coastline.
The shock news follows a Home Affairs Select Committee report of its investigation into the Government's £1.2 billion programme. The report concluded that 'the e-Borders programme is likely to be illegal under the EU Treaty'.
A spokeswomen for the UK Border Agency said that e-Borders would still be implemented and in any case was still at the planning stage. 'It is not illegal, but we still have to decide how it will work. If it is implemented on a voluntary basis then those yachtsmen who give us the information will be known about and therefore we will have little reason to approach them at sea. We are still working with yachtsmen and their representative bodies to work out the best way of implementing the scheme.
In a special report in the February issue of Yachting Monthly we interviewed the UK Border Agency chief, Brodie Clark, about his plans to bring the yachting fraternity into the scheme. This was before the Home Affairs Select Committee report and at that stage it was expected - by the UKBA - that e-Border compliance would be mandatory.



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Latest comments
January 05 19:58
chris lester
Common cense at last
January 05 22:20
John Dowling
No, they do not know what they are doing. The citizens of the British Isles are all suspects to the State - guilty until proven otherwise. Let's NONE of us register and sink this iniquitous system under a flood on non-compliance. It IS voluntary......
January 11 16:18
Will Arnold
I thought I was confused before but now I've lost it.
Or is it the home office that has lost it.
January 15 22:51
Peter Harbour
I keep my boat in the Schengen area, not in the UK. Are they interested in me? I am supposed to file a list of crew changes in the Netherlands and (apart from keeping a copy in the Ship's papers)as far as I am aware that is all I have to do - or do the Brits have powers in the Schengen area of which we have not been informed?