Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inbox Get our free View from Westminster email
Please enter a valid email address
Please enter a valid email address
SIGN UP
I would like to be emailed about offers, events and updates from The Independent. Read our privacy notice
Thanks for signing up to the
View from Westminster email
{{ #verifyErrors }} {{ message }} {{ /verifyErrors }} {{ ^verifyErrors }} Something went wrong. Please try again later {{ /verifyErrors }}
IT giant Fujitsu should repay the “fortune” spent on the Post Office scandal if it is found culpable, justice secretary Alex Chalk has suggested.
Rishi Sunak’s government will want to “secure proper recompense on behalf of the taxpayer” if the public inquiry delivers a damning verdict on the firm behind the faulty Horizon software, Mr Chalk said.
It comes as a Post Office investigator described as having a “heavy footprint” is due to give evidence for the inquiry’s first hearing of the year on Thursday.
Mr Sunak announced that hundreds of subpostmasters in England and Wales would have their names cleared by the end of the year under blanket legislation to be introduced within weeks.
And Mr Chalk suggested that Fujitsu will have to foot a large part of the compensation bill if the inquiry finds the “scale of the incompetence is as we might imagine”.
RECOMMENDED
Paula Vennells is handing back her CBE – what does the King have to do next?
Undo
Trump’s alleged ‘sexual proclivities’ graphically detailed in new Epstein documents
Undo
Dr. Kellyann
1 Drink You Need After 40 For Weight Loss (Drink This Daily)Dr. Kellyann| Sponsored Sponsored
Undo
Daily Buzzwinners
If Los Angeles Slot Players Knew This They Would Never Stop Playing Daily Buzzwinners| Sponsored Sponsored
Undo
Powered by Taboola Powered by Taboola
The prime minister is facing calls to go further and bar Fujitsu from securing government contracts and pursue the firm for payments.
Promoted stories
DateMyAge
Dating Site Where Women Message FirstDateMyAge Try Now
Undo
by Taboola by Taboola
Sponsored Links Sponsored Links
Promoted Links Promoted Links
Mr Chalk said the government would wait for the conclusions of the inquiry, chaired by retired judge Sir Wyn Williams, before it decides what action to take against the company.
Justice secretary Alex Chalk has offered warning to Fujitsu
" srcset="https://static.independent.co.uk/2024/01/09/09/af3b2383e127a0e3d857af460e3d34f9Y29udGVudHNlYXJjaGFwaSwxNzA0ODc2MTQ1-2.74687436.jpg?quality=75&width=320&auto=webp 320w, https://static.independent.co.uk/2024/01/09/09/af3b2383e127a0e3d857af460e3d34f9Y29udGVudHNlYXJjaGFwaSwxNzA0ODc2MTQ1-2.74687436.jpg?quality=75&width=640&auto=webp 640w" src="https://static.independent.co.uk/2024/01/09/09/af3b2383e127a0e3d857af460e3d34f9Y29udGVudHNlYXJjaGFwaSwxNzA0ODc2MTQ1-2.74687436.jpg" data-gallery-length="3" class="i-amphtml-fill-content i-amphtml-replaced-content">
Justice secretary Alex Chalk has offered warning to Fujitsu
(PA Wire)
“But bluntly, if the scale of the incompetence is as we might imagine, then I simply would want to secure proper recompense on behalf of the taxpayer,” the cabinet minister told ITV’s Peston.
“It’s absolutely right that there should be justice across the piece – yes for the subpostmasters which we’re talking about today – but frankly also for the taxpayer. This has cost and will cost a fortune.”
If Fujitsu is found to be at fault, it “should face the consequences”, Mr Chalk added, in a sign ministers could launch legal action against the Japanese company.
Post Office minister Kevin Hollinrake also told BBC Newsnight that it would be “only right” for Fujitsu to contribute to compensation bill if the inquiry finds it bears a lot of the responsibility for the scandal.
Hundreds of Post Office branch managers were convicted of swindling money on the basis of evidence from the tech giant’s flawed Horizon accounting system.
Post Office showed ‘incompetence and malevolence’, says minister
Those whose convictions are quashed are eligible for a £600,000 compensation payment, or potentially more if they go through a process of having their claim individually assessed.
There will also be a new upfront payment of £75,000 to many of the 700 or so affected, as Mr Sunak said innocent people embroiled in the fiasco would be “swiftly exonerated and compensated”.
Ministers are setting aside up to £1bn for compensation. Mr Hollinrake explained in the Commons that the victims would be eligible for compensation simply by signing a declaration that they hadn’t committed any crime.
Alan Bates – the former subpostmaster on whom the recent ITV series centre – said it was “about time” for the move to exonerate Post Office staff – but warned that “the devil is in the detail” when it comes to the government’s legislation.
Toby Jones played former subpostmaster Alan Bates in the ITV drama
(ITV)
But asked if he would be celebrating the victory, the 69-year-old told The Times “you must be joking” as he and many others are yet to receive final compensation.
Mr Bates told The Mirror: “£75,000 is an alternative to having your case independently assessed, so for the smaller cases, it will probably suffice. But for many cases, it is not enough.”
It emerged that the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) prosecuted three Post Office cases while Sir Keir Starmer was in charge. The Labour leader told reporters: “I wasn’t aware of any of them.”
Ministers have acknowledged the radical plan of a law to enforce mass exoneration could result in some subpostmasters who did commit crimes being wrongly cleared – but insisted the process was the most effective way of dealing with the vast majority who were victims.
Lord Ken MacDonald, the former director of Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), said it amounted to “parliament seizing from the courts and from the judges ... I hope it doesn’t come back to bite us.”
Fujitsu’s continued involvement in major IT schemes has raised concerns. Ministers tried to prevent the firm getting more official work but this proved “impossible” despite its “woeful” performance, a Tory peer revealed on Wednesday.
Lord Maude, who served as Cabinet Office minister under David Cameron, said procurement rules thwarted ministers’ efforts. He said if Fujitsu had “any sense of honour” it would swiftly make a significant payment towards the compensation packages.
The public inquiry, whose first hearing of the year on Thursday will feature Post Office investigator Stephen Bradshaw, is set to keep the scandal in the headlines.
Mr Bradshaw has been described as having a “heavy footprint” in the scandal after being involved in the criminal investigation of nine subpostmasters.
More about Post Office Rishi Sunak Horizon keir starmer
Join our commenting forum Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
10Comments
1/ 3Fujitsu should pay for Post Office scandal if guilty, says government
Fujitsu should pay for Post Office scandal if guilty, says government
Justice secretary Alex Chalk has offered warning to Fujitsu
PA Wire
Fujitsu should pay for Post Office scandal if guilty, says government
Toby Jones played former subpostmaster Alan Bates in the ITV drama
ITV
Fujitsu should pay for Post Office scandal if guilty, says government
PA/Getty
CCPA Notice Promoted stories
Nature MD
Gut Doctor: Fully Empty Your Bowels Each Morning (Here's How)Nature MD| Sponsored Sponsored
Learn More
Undo
investing.com
Woman's Husband Passed Away, Then She Opens His Workshop For The First Timeinvesting.com| Sponsored Sponsored
Undo
Sweet Penny Stocks
Jenna Bush Hager's Inheritance Makes The HeadlinesSweet Penny Stocks| Sponsored Sponsored
Undo
Read More Comments
Collapse Comments
? Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this article
Want to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today.
Subscribe
Already subscribed? Log in