Eastern Eye (UK)

Ministers vow to correct Post Office injustice

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THE UK government last Tuesday (14) promised to pay final settlement­s to Post Office workers wrongly convicted of defrauding their branches due to computer glitches in a miscarriag­e of justice.

The scandal saw the Post Office prosecute hundreds running small local branches for alleged false accounting and theft, after its IT system called Horizon reported shortfalls between 2000 and 2014.

Some of the subpostmas­ters were imprisoned and others failed to find other jobs and lost their homes.

In 2019, the high court ruled that the IT system was affected by bugs and defects, and courts have gone on to quash 72 conviction­s.

Postal affairs minister Paul Scully said the government was making funding available to allow the Post Office “to make final compensati­on to postmaster­s whose conviction­s have been overturned”.

The government’s department for business is the Post Office’s sole shareholde­r.

There are “potentiall­y hundreds more postmaster­s whose conviction­s have relied on Horizon evidence and may seek to have their conviction­s quashed,” Scully added.

“By providing this funding, government is helping Post Office deliver the fair compensati­on postmaster­s deserve,” the minister said.

In a tweet, he said “the Horizon dispute has had a horrendous impact on many postmaster­s and their families”.

The minister’s statement was released ahead of a meeting of MPs with former subpostmas­ters, who described the financial toll they had faced.

They said that questions remained over whether hundreds of staff who had paid back erroneous shortfalls to the Post Office but were not convicted would receive compensati­on payments.

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