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Compensation for Horizon scandal ‘nowhere near’ enough, say subpostmasters

The Government has pledged that it will foot the bill for the final compensation payments to the wrongly convicted workers.

Henry Saker-Clark
Tuesday 14 December 2021 08:13 EST
Former post office workers celebrate outside the Royal Courts of Justice, London (Yui Mok/PA)
Former post office workers celebrate outside the Royal Courts of Justice, London (Yui Mok/PA) (PA Archive)

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Subpostmasters have told MPs they have received “nowhere near” the funds they lost to the Post Office during the Horizon scandal back through compensation, as the Government committed to further payouts.

Paul Harry, a former subpostmaster who was accused of false accounting by the Post Office, said he has received only around a fifth of the funds he cashed out to the mail delivery operation after shortfalls appeared in the Horizon accounting system.

A number of other former subpostmasters and lawyers also explained to MPs on the Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Committee the financial toll of the scandal and compensation which has been offered since the first legal convictions were overturned.

Shortly before the committee hearing started, the Government pledged that it will foot the bill for the final compensation payments to the wrongly convicted workers.

The Post Office has said it is unable to cover the payments for the exonerated individuals but the Government – as its only shareholder – confirmed it will pay.

In a written ministerial statement, postal affairs minister Paul Scully said: “I am pleased to confirm that today the Government is making funding available to facilitate Post Office to make final compensation payments to postmasters whose convictions have been overturned.

“We are working with Post Office to finalise the arrangements that will enable the final settlement negotiations to begin as soon as possible.

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

So far, 72 postmasters’ convictions have been quashed.

Chairman of the BEIS committee Darren Jones said it was “wholly unacceptable” for the minister’s statement to published shortly before the hearing began.

He also said that “more questions need answering” as to whether the 555 people who paid false shortfalls but were not convicted will receive payments.

Alan Bates, a former subpostmaster and founder of the Justice for Subpostmasters Alliance representing these 555 individuals, said: “I think over the years when they were serving subpostmasters they paid in the region of £8.5 million back to the Post Office in stated shortfalls.

“That’s before anything else, like the loss of their businesses and all the rest of it, including the financial difficulties they’ve be left in.”

Mr Bates added the group received a £56.75 million settlement in 2019, but that £46 million went directly towards the cost of legal action.

“After that was removed, around £11m left, averaging around £20,000 per person,” he said.

“Unfortunately, each claim is closer to £700,000 in actuality of what people have lost to put them back in the position they started had the Post Office not done what they did.”

Mr Harry, who was convicted of false accounting, said he has received an interim compensation payment but is hoping for further payments.

He said: “I have received a small amount of just over £20,000, but my losses are in excess of £100,000, so I am nowhere near getting my money.”

Former subpostmaster Jo Hamilton told MPs she is “one of the lucky ones” after receiving back all her lost funds in compensation.

It came after she remortgaged her house and “borrowed money from my friends and parents”.

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