The following Statement was made in the House of Commons on
Wednesday 13 March. “With permission, Mr Speaker, I shall make a
Statement about Post Office legislation and the Horizon redress
schemes. I am very pleased to be able to announce that today we are
introducing a new Bill that will quash the convictions of
postmasters in England and Wales affected by the Horizon scandal.
As set out in my Written Statement last month, this legislation
will quash all convictions...Request free trial
The following Statement was made in the House of Commons on
Wednesday 13 March.
“With permission, Mr Speaker, I shall make a Statement about Post
Office legislation and the Horizon redress schemes.
I am very pleased to be able to announce that today we are
introducing a new Bill that will quash the convictions of
postmasters in England and Wales affected by the Horizon scandal.
As set out in my Written Statement last month, this legislation
will quash all convictions that meet a clear set of conditions.
Those in scope will have their convictions quashed on the day
that the new legislation is brought into force. Subject to
parliamentary passage, our aim is for Royal Assent to be received
as soon as possible before the Summer Recess.
We accept, and have always been clear, that the legislation may
overturn the convictions of some people who are guilty of genuine
wrongdoing, but we believe this is a price worth paying to ensure
that many innocent people are exonerated. However, the Government
will seek to mitigate the risk of people receiving financial
redress when they have not been wronged.
The Government also accept that this legislation is
unprecedented. It is an exceptional response to a factually
exceptional situation. I want to be clear that this does not set
a precedent, and neither is it a criticism of the judiciary or
the courts, which have dealt swiftly with matters brought before
them. The fact remains, however, that three years after the first
convictions were overturned, only around 100 have been quashed.
Without government intervention, many of these convictions could
not be overturned, either because all the evidence has long been
lost or because, quite simply, postmasters have lost faith in the
state and the criminal justice system, and will not come forward
to seek justice.
The legislation will apply to England and Wales only. However, we
are fully committed to working with the Scottish Government and
the Northern Ireland Executive through regular, weekly
official-level engagement to progress their own approaches. I
have met my counterparts in the Scottish Government and the
Northern Ireland Executive to offer support and address their
concerns, and I will have further meetings. The financial redress
scheme will be open to applicants throughout the UK, once
convictions have been overturned.
I thank the Business and Trade Committee, which recently
published a report that includes some recommendations for the
Government regarding Horizon redress. We will respond to them in
the usual way, but today I would like to address two of the
committee’s recommendations. The first is that responsibility for
redress should not lie with the Post Office, as it should be
subject to independent oversight—something that has also been
recommended to us by the Horizon Compensation Advisory Board. I
can announce today that the Department for Business and Trade,
rather than the Post Office, will be responsible for the delivery
of redress for overturned convictions. Final decisions on redress
will be made by independent panels or independent
individuals.
With your permission, Mr Speaker, I shall return to the House at
a later date to provide details on how we intend to deliver
redress for those who have their convictions overturned by the
Bill or via subsequent measures taken in Scotland and Northern
Ireland. We are discussing the details with the advisory board.
The Financial Secretary to the Treasury, my honourable friend the
Member for Mid Worcestershire (), will introduce
legislation to make any payments made via the new scheme exempt
from tax.
Secondly, the Select Committee recommended that the Government
introduce legally binding timeframes to deliver redress for
sub-postmasters, with financial penalties for non-compliance. I
strongly support the committee’s desire to speed up redress, but
we feel that its proposed regime would have the opposite impact.
It would potentially mean imposing penalties on forensic
accountants or others who are helping postmasters to prepare
their claims. Doing that would probably cause some of them to
withdraw from this work, which would slow down the delivery of
redress. Furthermore, we do not want to be in the position of
rushing postmasters into major decisions about their claims and
the offers they receive, which would possibly mean that some are
timed out of redress altogether. The advisory board has said that
its ‘strong view’ is that
‘this would be a backward step’,
which is why we passed legislation less than two months ago to
remove the arbitrary deadline from the group litigation order
scheme. We do not want to reverse that change.
However, the Government are acting to ensure that redress is
delivered as quickly as possible. First, we are working with
claimants’ lawyers to reduce the number of cases that require
expert evidence—for example, from forensic accountants—or medical
evidence, which delays claims. We will pilot that approach and,
assuming that the pilot succeeds, we hope to expand it
rapidly.
Secondly, the advisory board and I have asked for monthly reports
on each scheme. They will come from schemes’ independent case
managers, where such managers are in place. We will publish the
reports, which will give us the best basis on which to assess
measures for speeding up redress.
Finally, we are introducing optional fixed-sum awards. In
January, the Government announced that they would offer an
optional fixed-sum award of £75,000 to those in the group
litigation order scheme. As of 5 March, 110 offers have been
accepted, and over 100 people have taken the £75,000 fixed
payment. Of those who have accepted the fixed payment,
three-quarters are new claimants, so the fixed offer has already
meant that over 100 claims have been resolved promptly. In some
cases, those people will have got more than they would have asked
for. The fixed offer has also had a helpful effect on other
claims, because it substantially reduces work on small claims by
claimants’ lawyers, making more resource available to progress
larger claims more quickly.
I am pleased to announce today that the £75,000 fixed-sum award
offer will now be extended to the Horizon shortfall scheme, to
ensure that everyone is treated fairly across all the schemes.
Those who have already settled their claim below £75,000 will be
offered a top-up to bring their total redress to that amount;
over 2,000 postmasters will benefit quickly from this
announcement.
We are mindful that claims are not being submitted to the GLO
scheme as swiftly as we would like. We have already announced the
optional fixed-sum award of £75,000 but, to ensure that we get
help to claimants more quickly, I can announce today that anyone
who chooses not to take that offer, and instead submits a full
claim for individual assessment, will have their interim payment
topped up to £50,000 straightaway.
Many postmasters’ lives have been ruined by the Horizon scandal,
and we are working hard to deliver redress. We have set up the
Williams inquiry, which will discover the truth. We will provide
fair financial redress as promptly as we can, and we will
exonerate those who were so unjustly convicted of crimes that
they did not commit. I commend this Statement to the House.”
3.22pm
(Lab)
My Lords, as we have said many times before, the Fujitsu/Horizon
scandal is truly shocking and one of the most egregious
miscarriages of justice in British history. The scandal has
brought blight and devastation to the lives of thousands of
falsely convicted sub-postmasters and sub-postmistresses. Over 20
years on, they and their families still suffer from the
consequences and trauma of all they have been through. I pay
tribute to them for their determination in pursuing justice,
especially those who took the very courageous and difficult step
of challenging the Post Office. Without their bravery and
perseverance, the campaign would not be where it is today.
We of course welcome the legislation that has been laid before
Parliament. Before giving a full verdict on it, we will need to
properly scrutinise the detail and analyse its potential impacts.
In the first instance, the legislation still leaves a series of
outstanding issues, including the question of when justice and
compensation will be delivered and to whom.
I ask the Minister: what steps have he and Ministers in the other
place taken to prevent this rightly exceptional piece of
legislation being used by government in a nefarious way in
future? How are we protecting against the abuse of this
legislation further down the track? The flip side of that is that
there are many other scandals that courts, reviews and government
are working through. Could the principle of this legislation be
used by them?
As I have said before, I seek assurances on the territorial scope
of the legislation, which currently applies only to England and
Wales even though the Post Office is not devolved and the Fujitsu
Horizon system and the impacts of the scandal are UK-wide.
Approximately 30 cases need overturning in Scotland and Northern
Ireland but a series of outstanding questions remain as to when
sub-postmasters and sub-postmistresses in Scotland and Northern
Ireland in particular will receive their justice. I welcome the
Minister’s assurances that there will be regular dialogue with
the devolved Administrations, given the different legal
processes, but I will be a bit more specific: can the Minister
update your Lordships’ House on what conversations his department
has had with colleagues in Northern Ireland, who have expressly
requested that the cases there be included in the scope of this
legislation?
This is probably harder to deal with but can the Minister also
update your Lordships’ House on what conversations the department
has had with colleagues in Scotland about the progress on
exonerating sub-postmasters there? As we know, 80% of the redress
budget is yet to be paid out and considerable uncertainty remains
about when sub-postmasters will receive their full compensation.
We all agree, I am sure, that they have waited long enough and
that the delays are causing only further financial distress and
suffering.
The Commons Business and Trade Committee recommends that there be
a “legally binding timeframe” for the period between an offer
first being tabled and a settlement being reached. Would the
Minister care to comment on that recommendation? If those legally
binding targets are not adopted, what assurances can the Minister
give that Minister Hollinrake will meet his target of ensuring
that all compensation is out of the door by the end of the year?
I know that the Minister here and the Minister in the other place
are committed to ensuring that there are no further delays but
sub-postmasters and sub-postmistresses will want to know when
this will actually happen.
Given the recent chaos in the Post Office’s leadership, we
welcome the decision to take it out of the redress process. In
fact, last week, the noble Lord, Lord Arbuthnot, and I called for
this. Redress must have independent oversight; I thank the
Government Ministers and their teams for implementing this.
Financial redress alone cannot come close to repaying
sub-postmasters and sub-postmistresses for their suffering,
although it is important that we get it right. As we have
previously discussed, some of those impacted by the scandal have
sadly passed away; they did not live to see this legislation and
their innocence proven, nor to receive the compensation that they
rightly deserved. Can the Minister clarify the process for those
who have passed away so that their families can receive
closure?
On the families, especially children and partners, we see today
in the news that a number of children of sub-postmasters and
sub-postmistresses are looking to take legal claims against the
Post Office. Can the Minister inform your Lordships’ House of the
Government’s attitude towards this? It is vital that the
Government act with the urgency and speed that are needed to
correct this injustice. We on these Benches stand ready to work
with the Government to ensure the speedy implementation of this
Bill.
I have just one question regarding the Explanatory Notes. On page
7, paragraph 41, the sentence just trails off. It starts:
“Clause 2 gives the meaning of ‘relevant offence’ with reference
to several conditions set out in the subclauses”.
That is fine, but it continues:
“All of the conditions must be satisfied for an alleged offence
to”.
It just stops. Can the Explanatory Notes be updated? I understand
that this was rushed through, and that is absolutely fine, but it
would be helpful if we could have just a bit of clarity of what
the end of the sentence is meant to be.
(LD)
My Lords, the Liberal Democrat Benches echo the comments of the
noble Lord, Lord McNicol, about the consistent and determined
efforts of the wronged postmasters who still are fighting for the
redress that they deserve. I thank the Minister for the
Statement. We on these Benches are pleased to see that
legislation will start to correct the fundamental wrongs done to
most of the postmasters convicted as a result of the Horizon
scandal.
However, the Statement says that
“this legislation will quash all convictions that meet a clear
set of conditions”.
These are defined in paragraph 11, on pages 3 and 4 of the
Explanatory Notes for the Bill, which was introduced yesterday in
another place; the noble Lord, Lord McNicol, referred to those
Explanatory Notes just now. Can the Minister explain how these
criteria were decided upon? How many of the convicted postmasters
are excluded from this redress scheme as a result, and why? I
appreciate that all this has been done in a hurry, but even if my
questions cannot be answered now, please can the answers be
clearly articulated to those who will speak on this Statement so
that we can understand why? At the moment, it is not clear who is
and is not included as a result of Clause 2 of the Bill.
As I mentioned in a number of previous interventions on this
issue, we know that software issues were reported in the
predecessor systems to Horizon. Indeed, in 1997, when the noble
Lord, , was Paymaster-General, there
was a steady stream of complaints during the pilot rollout. The i
newspaperhas also revealed the problems with the Capture scheme,
under which a number of postmasters were also convicted. It said
yesterday:
“Steve Marston … was using Capture, an IT system rolled out by
the Post Office in the early 90s when he suffered unexplained
shortfalls of around £79,000. He insists he never stole ‘a penny’
from his branch at Heap Bridge, Greater Manchester, but felt
pressured into pleading guilty in 1998 in order to avoid a prison
sentence, a tactic the Post Office has admitted was widely used
by investigators to secure convictions”.
Can the Minister explain why this group of postmasters, who were
using Capture when there were complaints, are also excluded from
this Bill?
The Minister says in the Statement that the Bill only covers
England and Wales; the noble Lord, Lord McNicol, has already
covered this. It specifically excludes Scotland and Northern
Ireland. The Statement says:
“However, we are fully committed to working with the Scottish
Government and the Northern Ireland Executive through regular,
weekly official-level engagement to progress their own
approaches”.
If that is the case, why has the Justice Minister in the Scottish
Parliament, , expressed her real
concern that Scotland is not included? She said:
“We, along with the Northern Ireland Executive, urged the UK
Government to introduce UK-wide legislation as the best way to
ensure there is a quick, fair and equal solution for all the
affected sub-postmasters, particularly as the Post Office is
reserved to Westminster, so this announcement is extremely
disappointing”.
Given that, in that same paragraph, the Statement goes on to
say
“The financial redress scheme will be open to applicants
throughout the UK, once convictions have been overturned”,
why on earth has the decision been made by the Westminster
Government to exclude Scotland and Northern Ireland, when neither
of those devolved Governments want that?
The Statement made it clear, at last, that the Post Office will
no longer have responsibility for redress and should be subject
to independent oversight. My noble friend and I, and others from these
Benches, have also raised this as a fundamental problem of trust
for many postmasters, so its removal is welcome. However, I ask
whether the Department for Business and Trade is truly
independent of the process, not least because of the debate about
the speed of processing of claims that happened in January
following the differing statements from the Prime Minister,
and the Secretary of
State, . The Government are
responsible for the payments—I shall come on to that later—but
this gives them some skin in the game and one thing has to happen
now, which is to give postmasters confidence that oversight is
truly independent. Can the Minister therefore describe how
independent the independent panels or independent individuals
will be? Who will appoint them? Will there be a departmental
official on the panel? Will departmental staff clerk the panels?
Will the independent panels include a postmaster?
The Statement says that there will be legislation to make sure
that the payments are exempt from taxation. A regulation on
taxation exemption under the compensation arrangements for both
the Horizon and infected blood schemes was presented to
Parliament in December 2023. Is this a further simple amendment
to that regulation, or is it further, separate secondary
legislation, or is it a new Bill? How will it differ? Can the
Minister explain?
The final section of the Statement refers to the Select
Committee’s recommendation of a legally binding timeframe for
redress—here, I echo the questions from the noble Lord, Lord
McNicol—but I think there is some sympathy for ensuring speed
wherever possible. However, the Statement said that it would be
impossible without imposing penalties on forensic accounts. That
seems to be an extremely narrow focus. There is a balance to be
struck between ensuring as swift as possible processing of
payment and debate between postmasters and forensic accountants
about what is due to postmasters. The critical reason for
independence is to ensure that postmasters are afforded a truly
fair debate, which many say has been denied them in the initial
offers received from the scheme when it was run by the Post
Office.
Finally, I have been going through the central government supply
estimates for 2023-24 and obviously looked at the Budget papers.
I am still struggling to find the compensation payments—in total,
approaching about £1 billion—in either the department or Treasury
tables. Can the Minister help? I have raised this matter now
with, I think, three Ministers and would be grateful if the
Minister could write to me and point me in the right direction
for the figures. I know that has also raised these points in
the Select Committee he chairs.
(Lab)
My Lords—
The Minister of State, Department for Business and Trade () (Con)
We will come to the noble Lord shortly, although it is right to
be hasty.
I am extremely grateful to the noble Lord, Lord McNicol, and the
noble Baroness, Lady Brinton, for their input and will try to
answer their questions as we go through. On the noble Lord’s wise
point about why the sentence in the Explanatory Notes trails off,
I think there is a typo. If I remember rightly, it should say
“extinguish criminal convictions” at the end of that sentence. I
am grateful to him for pointing that out.
Perhaps I may cover collectively the broad themes raised. The
noble Lord, Lord McNicol, asked how we prevent the misuse or
abuse of this measure. I was interested to hear a noble Lord
speak in a previous debate about the quashing of convictions of
soldiers in the First World War. This was a group
conviction-quashing measure that was considered unique and was
specifically designed for special circumstances. There was great
concern that the process might be misused at a later date—I
cannot remember exactly when; it must have been 20 years ago or
more—and, clearly, that has not been the case. I think we are all
apprised of the need to make sure that such constitutional
situations are handled with extreme sensitivity and delicacy. In
this instance, the Government, like Peers on all sides of this
House—indeed, those in both Houses of Parliament—believe
sincerely that it is only through this measure that we can be
sure that people’s convictions are quashed. To confirm: this is
an active statement of quashing of convictions; people are not
required to apply to have their convictions quashed.
The issue of trust in the Post Office and the independence of the
system and of the court processes has been raised, and this is
the most effective way to ensure that we do the right thing by
people who we believe have been wrongly convicted using evidence
that we feel is clearly unreliable.
I would like to just cover the point the noble Baroness, Lady
Brinton, made about the criteria in the Bill. The criteria
governing who will qualify to have their convictions quashed are
well laid out, and I am sure there will be a debate about the
specifics when the Bill comes to this House. However, it is right
that this applies between a set period of dates, that it relates
to certain types of crimes linked to the Horizon computer system,
that having used the Horizon system has to be part of the process
of the conviction, and that, obviously, the person in question
was working for the Post Office at the time. We are making, in my
view, a series of pretty clear statements about what we are
trying to achieve here. It is perfectly reasonable to raise the
point about Capture. It was not felt appropriate to bring those
cases into this process. However, Horizon trial periods, or the
periods of beta testing for it, are included, as I understand it.
If that is not the case, I will provide the House with a
correction, but I believe that is right.
There has been a significant debate about the territorial scope
of this Bill. The reality is that we operate different legal
systems, and justice is devolved in Northern Ireland as it is in
Scotland. This is not a question of the Government trying to get
out of our responsibility or pass responsibility off. As the
noble Baroness rightly said, the Government’s redress schemes
cover the whole of the United Kingdom. There is no advantage to
not having a system that covers the entirety of the United
Kingdom. I am sure that many people believe that to be highly
preferable, and it would make logical sense, but we have been
especially careful to keep returning to the need to be sensitive
to the constitutional realities of the unique action we are
taking. It is right that, instead of looking at this stage for a
complete UK-wide Bill, we allow this to be devolved to the
common-law authorities in Scotland and Northern Ireland. I
reassure the noble Lord and the noble Baroness that we are in
regular contact. In fact, as we speak, a meeting is going on with
the devolved nations about how to achieve this. Everyone has the
same goal. I have not heard the comments made by the Scottish
Justice Minister, but if anything, that continues to point to a
high degree of collaboration.
We want justice to be done for these individuals as quickly as
possible, across the whole United Kingdom. I have spoken to my
colleague, Kevin Hollinrake, who has done a fantastic job in
driving this process forward. We are all of the same opinion.
Whatever measures are required to do this in the most appropriate
and speediest way, we will certainly take. We will look into any
way in which we can help the devolved authorities achieve their
goals, in line with ours.
The principle of a target timeline for settlements, which was
mentioned in the report cited earlier, was rightly raised. I feel
strongly that it makes a lot of sense superficially, but the
reality is that these are complex processes. We have already
delayed having a cliff edge, which we did not think would be
helpful. Some of these cases will take time to assess.
We agree on many things, but I am afraid that I do not agree with
the idea that there is a huge amount of unpaid compensation, as
if it is sitting in a bank waiting to be paid out. It does not
work like that. In fact, over three quarters of the claims filed
under the HSS scheme have been paid, a large proportion of those
under the GLO scheme have been paid, and a large number of
overturned convictions have been settled. We are working very
fast. I can reassure this House that it is not in the interests
of any member of this Government to delay in any way. We have
made very good progress.
Importantly for noble Lords listening today, we have raised the
fixed-rate payments so there is equality between GLO and HSS
schemes, and I believe we have also raised the interim payment
received. As soon as you submit a claim, you get £50,000 if you
do not take the minimum £75,000 pay, and there is a £450,000
interim payment for overturned conviction compensation. That is
important. We want to get money immediately into the pockets of
people who need to be compensated. Clearly, there is a margin for
discussion and debate, and it is absolutely right that that be
done carefully. I hope that we can get the right outcomes. Of
course, there is no limit to the compensation that can be
paid.
The noble Baroness, Lady Brinton, asked about the accounts of the
Department for Business and Trade and how this is accounted for.
I believe that it would be too soon for last year’s accounts, but
our next year’s accounts close in April and will be filed in July
or August. I assume some element of the accounting will appear
there. In terms of the billion or so that has been set aside, I
am told by the Treasury that it does not sit in a ring-fenced
account; it is part of the reserves that have been estimated as
required. Of course, we also expect contributions from other
areas as well. I am very comfortable coming back to noble Lords
who will clearly ask in more detail how the accounting process
works. I would be delighted to report to Parliament on that and I
am sure that there will be plenty of discussions and question
around it.
I hope that I have covered the main points, but I would like to
return to two final questions. In terms of postmasters who have
passed away, the estate is entitled to the compensation. There
are also issues where families who have lost joint homes, or
where there are additional complications around that, can receive
compensation as well.
The question of independent oversight is absolutely to be raised,
particularly regarding how these schemes are run. I am delighted
to report that the overturned convictions compensation scheme
will be run by the Department for Business and Trade, which I
think was demanded by the postmasters. It is very important that
people feel a sense of independent oversight, so we have
therefore appointed a number of senior judges to provide us with
that.
I do not have an answer on whether a postmaster will be included,
for example, on the oversight board. I think that is an extremely
good idea and I am sure that my colleague Kevin Hollinrake would
agree that it is an excellent idea. I cannot commit to that now,
but these are all very reasonable policy points to make sure that
the postmasters who have been affected feel a sense of
confidence. It is not just a question of having their convictions
overturned and receiving financial compensation; they need to
feel respected by the system that treated them so badly.
It is very important that all sides of the House feel able to
make contributions in terms of how we can make the system work
more effectively to achieve these goals. I am grateful for the
ability to have this debate. I think we have made extremely good
progress under the leadership of my Secretary of State, and
particularly Minister Kevin Hollinrake. Clearly, there is more
work to be done and we cannot move too fast to give these people
redress. I hope that I can count on the support of all Peers in
this House to bring this legislation through so that we can have
these convictions quashed in July.
3.46pm
(Con)
My Lords, I declare my interest as a member of the Horizon
Compensation Advisory Board. I pay tribute to my noble friend the
Minister; to Kevin Hollinrake, the Minister in another place; to
his impressive team of civil servants; to the Government in
general; to Alan Bates; to ITV; and especially to Alex Jennings,
of course. But, before this turns into an Oscars speech, we must
acknowledge that there is much to be done.
I just want to raise one matter: those excluded from this
legislation. I understand that the Government do not want to go
head to head with the Court of Appeal, but some people have been
excluded through the accident of fate—they have been refused
permission to appeal or have had their convictions not turned
down by the Court of Appeal. Will the Government encourage and,
if necessary, resource and facilitate, those people who are
expressly excluded for those reasons from this legislation? Will
the Government encourage them to go back to the Court of Appeal
for their convictions to be reconsidered? It would be quite wrong
if these sub-postmasters were, through that accident of fate, the
only sub-postmasters in the country to continue to have
convictions against their name.
(Lab)
My Lords—
(Con)
The noble Lord will have his moment; he will definitely be next,
I am sure of it.
My thanks go to my noble friend Lord Arbuthnot. As we all know, a
huge amount of thanks should go to him for his tireless efforts
over many years. It is a huge lesson for all of us who want to
make a difference in public life to see someone like him battle
away at the forces of the machine. He has given me personally a
great deal of inspiration and I am grateful to him also for the
way that he has handled debates such as this and for the
sensitive and thoughtful way that he has approached these complex
subjects.
On the matter of claimants who have had their appeals refused or
who, not being part of this scheme, have been unable to go
forward to appeal, I have listened to that comment and will have
further conversations with my colleagues about what we can do to
ensure that the right level of information is given to those
people to enable them to assess their position in the process.
Noble Lords must forgive me, I am not a lawyer and there may be
some specific issues around this, but I am told that those who
have not been able to go through to appeal are not prevented from
appealing again. It would strike me that, given the situation
around this whole process, the system would certainly bear this
in mind. I cannot speak on behalf of the courts; it is essential
that they retain their independence on that front.
I was interested to hear my noble friend’s suggestion of support
for those individuals, in terms of legal advice, or whatever it
may be. I will certainly take that back to the department and I
would have thought it would receive a very sympathetic hearing.
My noble friend is absolutely right that it would be very unfair
if there was a small section of individuals who lost out on this
process simply because they had tried to appeal before their
peers had done so. That would not be right and it is worth
looking into in some considerable detail.
(Lab)
Third time lucky, my Lords.
First, I concur with everything that my noble friend Lord McNicol
said from the Front Bench. I am not going to repeat all those
points; he covered the waterfront. I share some of the concerns
expressed by the noble Baroness, Lady Brinton. I also need to
declare an interest because I was a junior Minister at the time.
I was not dealing with this issue; I was dealing with what seemed
a bigger issue at the time—the privatisation of Royal Mail, which
never actually took place then.
Before I go on with my contribution, I pay tribute to somebody
who I know wanted to be here today, but ill health prevented him:
my noble friend , whose track
record on involvement with the Post Office and Royal Mail is
second to none. I saw him last week and he was hoping he would
manage to make it, but, clearly, he could not—that is for the
record.
I come to paragraph 33 in the Statement, which says that
“we will exonerate those who were so unjustly convicted of crimes
that they did not commit”.
Of course, I welcome that, but the people I want to focus on are
those who did commit crimes; what are the Government going to do
about them?
We heard recently that Fujitsu, unbelievably, was still being
involved in government contracts, although it has given back some
of the money. There are other people who ought to be held
responsible for what turned out to be crimes: deliberate attempts
to conceal a system that they knew was faulty. That includes
Fujitsu itself. So I would welcome the Minister making some
statement about when this particular aspect is going to be dealt
with.
I understand that there will be some aspects of this that might
be considered sub judice or whatever, but I would welcome an
initial comment on when and how the Government are going to deal
with this situation. The idea that Fujitsu should continue to be
seen as a reliable contractor, working with the Government, is in
my view somewhat doubtful. I look forward to hearing the
Minister’s response.
(Con)
I thank the noble Lord, , for his comments. I
wholeheartedly agree with him about how the order has come out.
Our first priority is to make sure that the victims are
compensated and justice is speedily done.
The second part—which, I am afraid, will take longer—is a
thorough analysis of what actually happened and why, over many
years, there was a persistent type of activity and a culture in
an organisation that was classified as an arm’s-length government
body: who should have done what, and at what time. Of great
importance is the role of the “state”—and I say that in inverted
commas, because I am not trying to play party politics here. I am
afraid that many people in this House over many years had
positions of responsibility that should have enabled a higher
degree of inquiry than clearly took place.
How do we make sure that these organisations function properly,
and how can we make sure that government officials, Ministers,
and so-called independent directors and other directors of these
organisations behave in the right way to ensure that they are run
properly, and we do not see a repeat of these activities? It is
very important that we have a broad and wide debate. That is why
it is always very important that we regard the untrammelled power
of the “state” with great suspicion.
I refer briefly to the noble Lord’s comments in relation to
Fujitsu. As I understand it, we are looking to work with Fujitsu
on how it can assist in compensating victims. I think that
conversation is ongoing, but at the end of the day, it is the
inquiry that will allow us to decide what to do next. It is
absolutely without question that there are people who need to be
held to account for these actions over the past 15 or so years. I
am grateful for this prompt; this will continue to be a part of
the process.
(Con)
My Lords, I join my noble friend Lord Arbuthnot in paying tribute
to my noble friend the Minister and other Ministers in another
place, along with all those in government who have got us to
where we are so far. It has been a hard and difficult road, and
it has been too long. The Minister is quite right that whatever
happens, we must see that justice is done, and we must do all
that we can in our power to ensure that this kind of abuse never
happens again.
However, I am curious. I am probably being a little premature,
but I do not understand why there has been no question, so far,
about the role of the board directors who came and went through
this appalling scandal: Tim Parker, Adam Crozier, Ken McCall,
Carla Stent, Zarin Patel, Allan Leighton, Alice Perkins, and
Susannah Storey—who I gather is now the Permanent Secretary at
the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport. What role
did these people play? Is this being looked at thoroughly in the
inquiry?
We do have something in our power: corporate manslaughter. That
might sound extreme, but four people committed suicide because of
what was done to them over a period of years, while this stellar
list of, as Private Eye would call them, “City slickers” came and
went, well paid as directors of the Post Office. Do they get off
scot free? Is the inquiry going to take so long that it gets
thrown into the long grass? Does my noble friend agree that we
should at least consider how these people should perhaps be
charged with corporate manslaughter, so that they can prove their
innocence at their own expense?
(Con)
I thank my noble friend for raising the salience of these very
important issues. It genuinely would not be helpful or
appropriate for me to make a comment on any specific case. The
inquiry itself is, in my view, extremely well led and very
detailed. We are going to draw a number of conclusions from the
extremely forensic amount of investigation that is being
undertaken at the moment.
On a broader point, my noble friend is absolutely right: the
principle around the leadership of these organisations, how they
function, how they report to their boards, the independence of
various directors on those boards and how those boards interact
with government departments and Ministers, is absolutely
something that I believe everyone in this House wants to look
more closely at. The principle of arm’s-length still being within
the reach of Ministers and responsible entities is also extremely
important. I hope that while that may not be the specific outcome
of the review relating directly to the Post Office, it will be
the next stage in the investigation by Ministers and Parliament.
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