How safe and secure are Australian’s private and personal details {data} that the Australian Bureau of Statistics is about to collect for the 2016 Australian Census?

In my opinion, it is neither safe nor is it secure.

Can the Australian Federal Government, Treasury and their Australian Bureau of Statistics be trusted to keep Census Data secure and safe.              

In my opinion, they have no intention of keeping them safe nor secure. 

greenrollerIn September 2015 Julie Bishop committed Australia to the United Nation’s $5-5 Trillion ‘Sustainable Development Goals/2030 Agenda’ {SDG’s}, and their 17 Goals and 169 Targets, another name and continuation of Agenda 21/ESD. The success
of the United Nation’s SDG’s relies solely upon the United Nation’s Biometric ID Scheme/National Electronic Identity Scheme {SDG Goal 16-9}. By their actions Australia is now committed to the mandatory reporting of all of Australians data including private and personal which is to be sent to the United Nations and Member States. No arguments that’s it.
The Australian Bureau of Statistics {ABS} has been leading the work on the United Nations Biometric ID Scheme for years. The ABS and CSIRO have been working for some time with the United Nations ‘BIG DATA AND GLOBAL WORKING GROUP’ in collecting Australian’s Mobile Phone Data and Social Media Data as well as other issues.
All of a sudden the UN’s 17 Goals and 169 Targets confirm that the 1992 Agenda 21/ESD is not solely about ‘SUSTAINABILITY’ and Climate Change, there are hundreds of other issues. The success of the SDG’s are reliant upon the United Nation’s Biometric ID Scheme/National Electronic Identity Scheme and the massive amount of data collected by CSIRO and by other means being sent to the UN.
Julie Bishop played a strategic part in formulating the SDG’s. Shortly after committing Australia to the SDG’s the Australian Senate Adopted them as a plan for the future up to 2030. The UN has embedded their SDG’s in their Human Rights Charter of which Australia is a signatory. This makes it mandatory for those who adopt the SDG’s to send all data collected to the UN so that they can monitor Australia’s progress in implementing their SDG’s.
While the ABS has handed our data to government, non government, businesses and civil society this is the first time in Australian history that a government has intentions of handing such a massive amount of data, including names and addresses that are to be kept for the first time, to an unelected foreign body. 
Laurence Jones.