A BRITISH tabloid`s exposé of the ease of obtaining fake identity  documents and UK visas in Pakistan has become a scandal of international  proportions because of its link with the upcoming Olympics. But the  problem is not a new one. Despite the money and expertise that has been  poured into modernising CNICs and passports in recent years, getting  hold of fake ones remains shockingly easy.
The old days of manual processes for creating these documents are long gone.
But  even now, when they are computerised and managed through automated  processes and electronic databases, the systems which apparently meet  international standards remain vulnerable to corruption. If you can find  an agent with the right links inside Nadra and the passport  directorate, procuring another person`s identity is simple enough for  anyone willing to pay a price.
And as long as it doesn`t crack  down hard enough on people on the inside who are willing to tamper with  the process, Nadra, where the CNICs that become the basis for fake  passports originate, has limited options. It can continue building more  sophisticated checks into the system, but much of the technology used is  already world-class, including software that carries out fingerprint  and photograph matching.
Ultimately, the problem comes down to  corrupt individuals being willing to manually override systemsand tamper  with records for a fee. While there have been multiple raids within  Nadra over the years, many of which don`t make it into the media, they  have obviously not been effective enough as deterrents.
Fixing  responsibility is not difficult the names of operators are entered at  every step of the process so this seems to be a simple enough matter of  being more vigilant about detecting irregularities and cracking down  more frequently on operators on the inside and agents on the outside.
Despite  the implication that the UK visa scam could have been used to smuggle  terrorists into the Olympics, at the moment this seems like pure  speculation. And the history of Islamist terrorist attacks in the UK  indicates that it is largely a home-grown problem there. But for  Pakistan itself, this is a national-security matter. Fake Pakistani  documents have been found on foreign terrorists, including former  Iranian Jundullah head Abdolmalek Rigi and Ramzi Yousef, and been used  by members of banned Pakistani outfits to leave the country.
So  while such forgeries take place in other countries too, in Pakistan`s  case they are particularly risky, further damaging its international  reputation and allowing domestic militants to get away. World-class  systems may be in place, but Nadra and the passport directorate need to  carry out some significant housecleaning.
 
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