UK spy chief's family details posted on Facebook

Published: Sunday, July 5, 2009 8:46 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 

LONDON — He's the spy who came in from the beach.

Holiday snapshots and family details about the newly appointed head of Britain's MI6 intelligence agency have been removed from a Facebook page after a newspaper told the government about them.

Pictures from the social networking Web site published in the Mail on Sunday newspaper show John Sawers posing with his children, wearing a Santa hat and playing Frisbee on a beach.

The paper said the information was posted by Sawers' wife on her Facebook page. It included vacation photos, details about the couple's three children and the location of their London home.

Shelley Sawers' page has been removed from the site, although a cached page can still be viewed that shows a picture of the spy chief's wife.

Some politicians called the details a security lapse — but others said they revealed nothing but a few mildly embarrassing domestic details.

"It's not a state secret that he wears Speedo swimming trunks," said Foreign Secretary David Miliband. "For goodness' sake, let's grow up."

The Foreign Office would not comment further on the case.

Story continues below

But Conservative lawmaker Patrick Mercer, who heads Parliament's counterterrorism subcommittee, said the revelations left Sawers open "to criticism and blackmail."

John Sawers, 53, was named last month as the new head of the Secret Intelligence Service, or MI6, Britain's foreign intelligence agency. A former spy, diplomat and foreign policy adviser to ex-Prime Minister Tony Blair, he is currently Britain's ambassador to the United Nations.

He is due to take up his new post in November.

Until the 1990s, the identity of the MI6 chief, known as C, was kept secret. Until 1992, Britain's government refused even to confirm the organization's existence.

Authorities have gradually become more open about MI6 and its domestic sister service MI5 in a bid to shed the agencies' cloak-and-dagger image and attract a wider range of staff.

Liberal Democrat foreign affairs spokesman Edward Davy called for an inquiry into the lapse.

"Normally, I would welcome greater openness in government for officials or politicians, but this type of exposure verges on the reckless," he told the Mail on Sunday.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

previousnext

Latest comments

It certainly is good that the front office made it so I cannot watch any...

House passes health care bill

I'm going to sleep well tonight. I'm sure others that think only about...

House passes health care bill

We currently have the world's most expensive health care. In the United...

House passes health care bill

Now that we are revamping healthcare to cover preexisting conditions, let's...

Utah Jazz fall apart against Kings

totally agree my friend Grant Napear is happy with his Kings and Westie...

The only negative part of this bill was the nearly unanimous opposition by...

After 2010 obam will be a lame duck, then something good will sart to happen.

Hall, Cougars crush Cowboys

Good win for the Cougars, they took the TCU loss out on Wyoming. Now if they...

what a great performance by the cougars. congradulations to BYU and the...

Has this guy ever explained how we're going to pay $1.2 trillion over the...

Advertisements
Advertisement