Spy chief's wife 'shares' on Facebook

The new open and transparent nature of Britain's MI6 intelligence agency has reached new heights with the revelation today that…

The new open and transparent nature of Britain's MI6 intelligence agency has reached new heights with the revelation today that the wife of it's new head had posted personal details on her unrestricted Facebook page.

There were calls for an inquiry today into whether Sir John Sawers should be allowed to take up his post after his wife apparently published the personal details and photographs on the social networking site.

Lady Shelley Sawers disclosed potentially compromising information, including the location of the London flat used by the couple and the whereabouts of their three children and of Sir John's parents on the social networking site, the Mail on Sundayreported.

The details, which were removed after the newspaper contacted the Foreign Office, also revealed the couple’s friendships with actors Moir Leslie and Alister Cameron.

READ MORE

Lady Sawers’ half-brother, Hugo Haig-Thomas, a former diplomat, was said to be among those featured in family photographs on Facebook.

Mr Haig-Thomas was an associate and researcher for controversial historian David Irving, who was jailed for three years in Austria in 2006 after pleading guilty to Holocaust denial, the paper reported.

Lady Sawers put no privacy protection on her account, allowing any of Facebook’s 200 million users in the open-access “London” network to see the entries, the paper said.

Senior politicians said the security lapse raised concerns about Sir John’s ability to take up his post as chief of the Secret Intelligence Service in November, giving him responsibility for Britain’s overseas spying operations.

Edward Davy, the Liberal Democrat foreign affairs spokesman, called on prime minister Gordon Brown to launch an inquiry into the matter.

He told the paper: “Normally, I would welcome greater openness in Government for officials or politicians but this type of exposure verges on the reckless.

“The prime minister should immediately commission an internal inquiry as to whether this has breached the security of the incoming head of MI6 too seriously to allow him to take up the post.”

Conservative MP Patrick Mercer, chairman of the counter-terrorism sub-committee, told the paper the MI6 chief had left himself open to blackmail.

“Sir John Sawers is in a very sensitive position and by revealing this sort of material his family have left him open to criticism and blackmail.

“As a long-serving diplomat and ambassador, his whole family have been involved in his line of business for decades. I would have hoped they would have been much more sensitive to potential security compromises like this.”

Foreign secretary David Miliband said it was “no state secret” that Sir John wore Speedos on family holidays and told BBC1’s Andrew Marr Show: “For goodness sake let’s grow up.”

He described Sir John as an “outstanding professional” and denied that the details on the social networking website, which have since been removed, would compromise his career.

Former prime minister Sir John Major said the issue had been “overblown”. He told the same programme: “I know John Sawers. He’s a very able man, he’s a very able appointment. It’s pretty unfortunate that this has happened, I think that is true.

“But I think when you’re faced with leaving Iraq possibly too early, huge problems in Afghanistan, the mess in Pakistan, the depth of the recession, I think this falls a long way below those.”

PA