Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Public outrage over wrongful convictions in Post Office 'thefts'

A petition calling for former Post Office boss Paula Vennells to be stripped of an honour has garnered more than a million signatures

Public outrage over wrongful convictions in Post Office 'thefts'

PUBLIC anger is mounting over what has been described as Britain's biggest ever miscarriage of justice that saw hundreds of subpostmasters wrongly convicted of theft because of a computer software glitch.

Lives were ruined by the false accusations that led to some Post Office branch managers being jailed, going bankrupt, losing their homes and their health.


Four people took their own lives and dozens of those since exonerated died without seeing their names cleared.

Now, a TV drama telling the story of the subpostmasters' ordeal at the hands of their own employer has generated a wave of sympathy for the victims.

Critics hailed the four-part Mr Bates vs The Post Office, broadcast last week, for humanising the ordeal of hundreds of people prosecuted for false accounting and theft between 1999 and 2015.

Far from being criminals, the subpostmasters -- pillars of their local communities -- had not stolen a penny.

In fact they were the victims of flawed accounting software and the state-owned Post Office's determination to defend it.

Following the broadcast, a petition calling for former Post Office boss Paula Vennells to be stripped of an honour she received from Queen Elizabeth II has garnered more than a million signatures.

Prime minister Rishi Sunak has described the scandal as an "appalling miscarriage of justice" that should "never have happened".

More than 700 subpostmasters ended up with criminal convictions as a result of the scandal, with 236 serving jail time.

Kevan Jones, an MP who sits on a board set up to award compensation to victims, said the programme had successfully communicated the depths of the subpostmasters' suffering.

"The drama was very good not only at exposing the lies and deceit that took place, it showed the complete heartache and broken lives," he said.

He warned, however, that it would be difficult to get more convictions overturned because "most of these people will not come forward... They will not go anywhere near a court of law because of the trauma".

To date only 93 convictions have been formally overturned.

"We have devised some options for resolving the outstanding criminal convictions with much more pace," business minister Kevin Hollinrake told parliament on Monday (8).

In 2017, Bates and five others took the Post Office to court on behalf of 555 subpostmasters.

Two years later the High Court ruled that it had been computer errors, not criminality, that had been behind the missing money.

Judge Peter Fraser condemned the Post Office for "institutional obstinacy" over its refusal to properly investigate the real source of the problem.

A public inquiry into the scandal opened in February 2022 but has yet to examine who at the top of the Post Office knew what and when.

Victims hope it will establish who was responsible for Post Office lawyers hounding innocent people through the courts even after credible doubts had been raised about Horizon.

Nick Wallis, a journalist and author of "The Great Post Office Scandal", said the way Post Office investigators had gone about prosecuting people had been an "absolute racket" and its board had gone "out of its way to cover it up".

"We are seeing the people who are still able to function and still able to tell their stories," he said.

James Arbuthnot, an MP at the time of the scandal who campaigned on behalf of victims, said the number of people formally cleared was "pathetically small" and called for parliament to step in.

"We've seen the way that investigators behaved... contrary to the rule of law," he said. "These convictions have got to be set aside."

(AFP)

More For You

Starmer-Getty

Keir Starmer had indicated last month that he would reverse the cuts. (Photo: Getty Images)

Government restores winter fuel benefit to 9 million pensioners after backlash

THE GOVERNMENT will reinstate winter fuel payments to millions of pensioners this year, reversing an earlier decision that had removed the benefit for most recipients in England and Wales. The move comes after months of criticism and political pressure on prime minister Keir Starmer.

After taking office in July, Starmer's Labour government had removed the winter fuel payments for all but the poorest pensioners as part of broader spending cuts.

Keep ReadingShow less
Kemi Badenoch

The Conservative leader said she asks people to remove face coverings—whether burqas or balaclavas—when they attend her surgeries. (Photo: Getty Images)

Getty Images

Badenoch backs employers’ right to ban face coverings

KEMI BADENOCH has said she will not speak to women wearing burqas or other face coverings at her constituency surgery.

In an interview with The Sunday Telegraph, the Conservative leader said she asks people to remove face coverings—whether burqas or balaclavas—when they attend her surgeries.

Keep ReadingShow less
Croydon’s Vegan Big Lunch Draws Community Together with Mayor Chatterjee

Mayor Richard Chatterjee joins locals in celebrating compassion and culture at Croydon's vegan picnic

Getty images

Vegan picnic in Croydon brings crowds together for The Big Lunch with Mayor Richard Chatterjee

A sunny Sunday afternoon turned into a celebration of kindness, flavour, and connection as Croydon's Lloyd Park played host to a vibrant vegan picnic on 8 June. Marking The Big Lunch, a UK-wide community initiative, local vegetarians and vegans gathered with loved ones for a day of delicious food, music, and togetherness.

Plant-based plates with a powerful message

Keep ReadingShow less
Mumbai-local-getty

Officials said work is also ongoing to redesign existing non-AC local trains to improve ventilation so that automatic door closing systems can be installed. (Photo: Getty Images)

Getty Images

After deaths of four commuters, railways to add automatic doors to Mumbai local trains

THE RAILWAY Ministry has decided to install automatic door closing systems in existing and new local trains on the Mumbai Suburban network, following the deaths of four commuters and injuries to nine others who fell from overcrowded trains in Thane district on Monday, officials said.

A senior official said that after the incident, the Railway Minister and Railway Board officials held a detailed meeting and tasked the Integral Coach Factory (ICF), Chennai with manufacturing non-air-conditioned local trains with automatic doors for Mumbai Suburban services.

Keep ReadingShow less
Imran Khan

Imran Khan has been held in Adiala Jail since August 2023 in several cases. (Photo: Getty Images)

Getty Images

Imran Khan may secure bail on 11 June, says party leader

FORMER prime minister Imran Khan, 72, is expected to seek bail in the Al-Qadir Trust case when the Islamabad High Court (IHC) hears petitions on 11 June to suspend the sentences handed to him and his wife Bushra Bibi.

Khan has been held in Adiala Jail since August 2023 in several cases. PTI chief Gohar Ali Khan told ARY News that “June 11 is going to be an important day for both Khan and his wife,” but he gave no further reason. The IHC had earlier adjourned the matter after the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) asked for more time to prepare its arguments.

Keep ReadingShow less