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Fujitsu still has not contributed
to £2BN redress bill as UK CEO is moved to
non-exec role “managing response” to the
scandal
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Horizon IT
supplier Fujitsu continues
to benefit from substantial public
contracts as BTC calls for expansion
to “self-imposed moratorium” and value of contracts to be
published
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Committee calls for immediate legislation to quash
Capture-related convictions, with alarming new evidence
of potentially unsafe convictions in pre-Horizon
cases
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The Committee heard distressing
evidence that MoJ is still wrongly judging
eligibility of sub-postmasters who should have had their
convictions quashed, with no route for
appeal
One year on from the Committee's last report on the Post Office
Horizon scandal, progress has been made delivering redress for
victims of the Fujitsu-supplied
Horizon IT scandal. More than 11,300
claimants have received payments with £1.44 billion
distributed.
But thousands of sub‑postmasters are still
waiting for the redress they are
owed, and in a report today the Committee says “serious
structural failings persist” in the redress
system. Many victims still face unacceptable delays,
inadequate offers, and administrative processes
that “re‑traumatise” those who have already
been seriously wronged.
Fujitsu, with a central role in one of the
greatest miscarriages of justice in British
history, has contributed nothing to the bill for
redress and is still expanding its public sector
revenues. A few days after UK CEO Paul Patterson
gave evidence in Parliament, Fujitsu
announced that he would move this month to
a non-executive role “managing the company's response"
to the public inquiry into
the Horizon scandal.
There is a serious risk of an unknown number of
unsafe convictions - potentially including wrongful
imprisonment – that are yet to be uncovered or have
any access to justice. The Committee found evidence that the
MoJ is wrongly judging eligibility of sub postmasters
who should have had their convictions quashed, and there is no
route for appeal in these cases.
And there is now emerging evidence that pre-Horizon IT systems,
especially Capture, had similar flaws to the Horizon
system that may have contributed to unsafe convictions.
Incomplete records mean that the current confirmed
number of Capture cases may represent just “the
tip of another iceberg”, with the Committee calling
for urgent legislation to quash Capture-related
convictions.
- The Horizon Shortfall Scheme (HSS), still managed by Post
Office, routinely sees its offers
overturned and significantly increased after
a DBT-administered appeal. The stark disparities
between initial offers and eventual
awards reinforces that the HSS is no longer fit for
purpose. Fully assessed claims continue to take far beyond
target timelines with thousands of late
claims still awaiting final offer.
- The Horizon Convictions Redress
Scheme (HCRS) is
performing better, but claimants are still being
forced to jump through administrative hoops to secure
what is now effectively a guaranteed minimum £600k
redress payment. That should simply be paid in
full to all eligible claimants now.
- Fujitsu has acknowledged its moral obligation to contribute
to the cost of redress, yet it has made no interim payment and
has agreed no figure. The total cost of redress payments now
stands around £2 billion. But despite its
“self-imposed moratorium” on bidding for new public
contracts, Fujitsu continues to benefit from
substantial Government contracts. The failure to even offer
an interim amount is “unacceptable”.
Rt Hon MP, Chair of the Business and
Trade Committee, said: “For hundreds
of sub-postmasters, justice has come far too slowly. Many have
waited years for the truth to be recognised and for the
compensation they are owed. Yet today we find serious structural
failings still blocking the road to justice.
“Thousands of victims are still waiting for fair redress,
while the processes designed to help them are too often slow,
bureaucratic and re-traumatising. That is simply unacceptable
after one of the greatest miscarriages of justice in British
history.
“Worse, Fujitsu has yet to contribute a penny to the nearly
£2 billion redress bill, even as it continues to benefit from
public contracts. That cannot continue. It is simply wrong that
taxpayers are covering the costs for Fujitsu's sins while Fujitsu
is still profiting from taxpayers funded contracts.
“We were also concerned to hear new evidence that suggests
unsafe convictions linked to earlier systems such as Capture may
be only the tip of another iceberg. Parliament must act quickly
to quash these convictions and ensure that every victim finally
gets the justice they deserve.
“The victims of this scandal have shown extraordinary
courage. The country owes them more than apologies — it owes them
justice, accountability, and full and fair redress without
further delay.”