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Afghanistan: Taliban seized US military biometric devices, report says

  • Afghans scramble to delete digital history, evade biometrics
  • Concerns that digital IDs and databases can be used to target people

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A US soldier scans the eyes of an Afghan man with an Automated Biometric Identification System in 2011. File photo: AFP
Taliban forces have reportedly seized US military biometric devices that can scan irises, fingers, and faces, which could help them identify Afghans who assisted coalition forces.

The devices, known as HIIDE, or Handheld Interagency Identity Detection Equipment, were seized during the Taliban’s offensive, according to The Intercept.

The Intercept spoke to current and former US military officials, “all of whom worried that sensitive data they contain could be used by the Taliban”.

The devices are mean to connect with Biometrics Automated Toolset (BAT), identification-processing software used by US soldiers to scan for threats.

HIIDE can create tracking reports of biometric encounters and warns users if a person being checked is on a watch list, Signal Magazine reported.

If the Taliban have not already accessed the data, a US Army Special Operations veteran said that the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISS), Pakistan's spy agency that has a history of working closely with the Taliban, may provide them with the tools to do so, The Intercept reported.

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