Eastern Eye (UK)

Justice for Seema Misra

ASIANS ARE AMONG 39 SUB-POSTMASTER­S WHOSE CONVICTION­S HAVE BEEN QUASHED

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IMAGINE a scene in which Paula Vennells has her knee pressed on Seema Misra’s neck so she cannot breathe.

This is effectivel­y what Vennels, chief executive of the Post Office, and her senior staff did when pursuing a malicious prosecutio­n of Seema, a subpostmas­ter in West Byfleet, Surrey.

Seema, who received a 15-month prison sentence at Guildford crown court in 2010 for “stealing” £74,609, was eight months pregnant.

It now turns out she was completely innocent. There was a glitch in the Post Office’s Horizon computer system which was responsibl­e for the shortfall.

The only way justice can be done in one of the worst miscarriag­es of justice Britain has seen in decades is for Vennels and her senior executives to be prosecuted and given exemplary prison terms. Ten years would not be too much.

Seema, who collapsed in court when her sentence was announced, said: “I would definitely have killed myself if I hadn’t been pregnant.”

It must be a bad joke that Vennels describes herself as “an Anglican minister”. She stepped down £5 million richer in February 2019 after seven years in the job.

The buck should stop with her. She should be stripped of her ill-gotten gains as well as the CBE she was given for “services to the Post Office and to charity”.

The court of appeal last week quashed the conviction­s of 39 former sub-postmaster­s. Seema was one of them. The others included Khayyam Ishaq, Rubina Shaheen, Kashmir Gill, Vijay Parekh, Tahir Mahmood and Harjinder Butoy.

Seema was suspended in 2008 after an “audit” found the accounting discrepanc­y. Over two years she had attempted to balance her books, borrowing money and transferri­ng takings, but failed to keep her head above water.

During the trial, the Post Office deliberate­ly withheld informatio­n that would have helped her. A fair judge might give Vennells an extra five years for that.

“They played with people’s lives,” said Seema. “Those at the Post Office who knew what was going on should go to prison.”

During her trial, she refused to plead guilty, believing justice would prevail. Seema now thinks racism was partly to blame for her conviction at the hands of an all-white jury.

“The court documents read ‘The Queen vs Seema Misra.’ It played with people’s emotions. Why would people believe the Asian lady over the Queen?” she pointed out.

Seema was given a conditiona­l release after four months, but had to wear an electronic tag. “People stopped talking to us,” she recalled.

Her taxi driver husband, Davinder, revealed: “I was beaten up and called a ‘f***ing P*ki’, coming to this country and stealing old people’s money.”

Seema, who was dubbed the “pregnant thief” and Davinder, now 45 and 49 respective­ly, were forced to move home. They now live in nearby Knaphill in Surrey, with their sons Aditya, 20, and nineyear-old Jairaj.

“No amount of money can make up for the struggle I went through,” she said.

What we need are the internal Post Office documents that would identify the culprits behind Seema’s prosecutio­n.

The Conservati­ve peer, James Arbuthnot, described the Post Office’s actions under Vennells’ stewardshi­p as “cruel and incompeten­t”.

Another sub-postmaster, Harjinder Butoy, who was also wrongly convicted of theft and jailed for three years and four months in 2008, called the Post Office “a disgrace”.

He said those responsibl­e for the scandal “need to be punished, seriously punished”, adding: “They’re just bullies, that’s all they are. Somebody needs to really, really sort this out and charge them for this.”

Vennels thinks she can get away by issuing an apology: “I am truly sorry for the suffering caused to them as a result of the conviction­s which the court of appeal has overturned.”

Neil Hudgell, the lawyer who

represente­d 29 of the former sub-postmaster­s, said the Post Office “has been found to have been an organisati­on that not only turned a blind eye to the failings in its hugely expensive IT system, but positively promoted a culture of cover-up and subterfuge in the pursuit of reputation and profit. They readily accepted that the loss of life, liberty and sanity for many ordinary people was a price worth paying in that pursuit.”

The Horizon software system was developed by Fujitsu Limited, a Japanese multinatio­nal informatio­n and communicat­ions technology equipment and services company.

How the Post office did not realise that the computer system was at fault when pursuing so many sub-postmaster­s is hard to explain.

The Metropolit­an Police are conducting an investigat­ion into Fujitsu workers after Justice Fraser wrote to the director of public prosecutio­ns expressing “grave concern” about the evidence provided in earlier court hearings.

The Communicat­ion Workers Union and MPs have backed lawyers in the call for Post Office officials who “maliciousl­y ruined the lives of innocent people by prosecutin­g them in pursuit of profits” to be investigat­ed.

Vennells should be among those to face questions from police, it said.

The prime minister, Boris Johnson, said last week: “I welcome the court of appeal’s decision to overturn the conviction­s of 39 former sub-postmaster­s in the Horizon dispute, an appalling injustice which has had a devastatin­g impact on these families for years. Lessons should and will be learnt to ensure this never happens again.”

That’s not enough. Vennels and her team must be prosecuted. Just as white police officer Derek Chauvin was tried and found guilty of killing African American George Floyd in Minneapoli­s.

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 ??  ?? TECHNICAL FAULT: There are calls for the former CEO of the Post Office to face legal action for the malicious prosecutio­n of 39 ex-sub-postmaster­s
TECHNICAL FAULT: There are calls for the former CEO of the Post Office to face legal action for the malicious prosecutio­n of 39 ex-sub-postmaster­s

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