Yorkshire Post

Davey put on spot over PO scandal late apology

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LIBERAL Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey has said he “probably should have said sorry earlier on” in relation to his role in the Post Office scandal.

Sir Ed served as post office minister under the coalition government from 2010 to 2012 and apologised to victims of the scandal when writing in The Guardian earlier this month.

Hundreds of subpostmas­ters were wrongly convicted because of faulty accounting software, with the major miscarriag­e of justice in the spotlight thanks to an ITV drama.

Sir Ed will give evidence alongside former Post Office boss Paula Vennells at the Post Office Horizon IT Inquiry when it resumes in April.

Asked why it took him so long to apologise, he told Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg: “I probably should have said sorry earlier on, but it is a huge scandal and our hearts go out to those hundreds of subpostmas­ters and their families who were treated appallingl­y.

“The key thing now is to make sure that those exoneratio­ns happen quickly, that they get the compensati­on quickly and that they get to the truth with the inquiry.”

Sir Ed previously said he was repeatedly lied to by the Post Office about the efficacy of its software.

Asked whether he should have questioned the Post Office’s version of events a bit harder, he said: “I was never asked a question in parliament, actually. It wasn’t raised that much with me – Mr [Alan] Bates did, and that’s why I met him.

“There were a few written questions and a few letters, but it wasn’t actually until the BBC had a Panorama programme, where they found that insider in Fujitsu who blew the whistle… and the Panorama programme was aired in August 2015.”

Writing in The Guardian on February 1, Sir Ed said he was “deeply sorry” for the families who have had their lives ruined.

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