A second batch of secret government files has been found on a train, a British newspaper said.
In a preview made available late on Saturday, yesterday’s edition of the Independent said the papers dealt with Britain’s approach to tackling the financing of global terrorism, the drugs trade and money-laundering.
The newspaper said the documents were found on a train bound for London on Wednesday, the same day another batch of secret documents on al-Qaeda and Iraq were handed to the BBC after being left on a train.
The BBC said those documents, stamped “UK Top Secret,” carried assessments of al-Qaeda’s vulnerabilities and the capabilities of Iraq’s security forces.
The Independent said yesterday it had returned the documents and would not be publishing any of the details they contained.
It was not immediately clear where the documents came from or which government body was responsible for them.
The British government has suffered a series of embarrassing security breaches in the past months. In December, the Department of Health lost information on some 168,000 patients.
In November, tax officials lost computer discs containing information — including bank records — for 25 million people, nearly half the country’s inhabitants.
EUROPEAN TARGETS: The planned Munich center would support TSMC’s European customers to design high-performance, energy-efficient chips, an executive said Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電), the world’s largest contract chipmaker, yesterday said that it plans to launch a new research-and-development (R&D) center in Munich, Germany, next quarter to assist customers with chip design. TSMC Europe president Paul de Bot made the announcement during a technology symposium in Amsterdam on Tuesday, the chipmaker said. The new Munich center would be the firm’s first chip designing center in Europe, it said. The chipmaker has set up a major R&D center at its base of operations in Hsinchu and plans to create a new one in the US to provide services for major US customers,
The Ministry of Transportation and Communications yesterday said that it would redesign the written portion of the driver’s license exam to make it more rigorous. “We hope that the exam can assess drivers’ understanding of traffic rules, particularly those who take the driver’s license test for the first time. In the past, drivers only needed to cram a book of test questions to pass the written exam,” Minister of Transportation and Communications Chen Shih-kai (陳世凱) told a news conference at the Taoyuan Motor Vehicle Office. “In the future, they would not be able to pass the test unless they study traffic regulations
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