I was jailed while pregnant during Post Office scandal. I'm still waiting for compensation

7 hours ago 4

Adrian Harms & Abi McLoughlin,in West Byfleetand

Tanya Gupta,South East

BBC/Adrian Harms A woman with dark hair and a multiple colour jumper siting on a green sofa inside her living room.BBC/Adrian Harms

Seema Misra was jailed while she was pregnant

A former sub-postmistress who was wrongly jailed while pregnant during the Post Office's Horizon IT scandal is still awaiting full compensation more than 15 years after her ordeal.

Seema Misra, who ran a post office in West Byfleet, Surrey, criticised ongoing delays as an MPs' report found thousands were awaiting full redress, but said the main issue was accountability.

Misra - jailed in 2010 and cleared in 2021 - said accountants and lawyers were working on her final claim.

"It's taken 21 years of my life, to be honest," Misra said. "June 2005, that's when we bought the post office and, the very first day, we had issues and then the legal battle started in 2008."

"It's taken a toll. We never expected these things can happen in a democratic country," she said.

She said those affected wanted compensation for all victims, but she wanted to see those responsible for the wrongful convictions behind bars, to show "the system does work in the country and there's nobody above [the] law".

The report by the Business and Trade Committee (BTC) found delays, administrative errors and undervalued offers were continuing across several schemes.

The chairperson of BTC, Liam Byrne, was asked by BBC Radio 4's Today programme whether the IT company had refused to make interim payments or had not been asked.

The MP replied: "They haven't been given a specific number, that is the challenge.

"We've got this judicial inquiry that is under way, judge-led inquiry that was under way, but it's not clear if it is going to opine on exactly what Fujitsu's guilt might be, nor how much Fujitsu should pay.

"We do think ministers need to be tougher with Fujitsu and actually demand an interim payment now before a final sum is settled."

MPs heard the Horizon Shortfall Scheme, which compensates some victims, was "broken".

Examples were given to the committee of initial offers rising from hundreds of thousands of pounds to more than £1m on appeal.

PA Media Jo Hamilton as photographed after leaving the Post Office Horizon IT inquiry in London in 2024. She is wearing a blue shirt with a floral pattern and a dark jacket and she has curly blonde hair.PA Media

Jo Hamilton is still advocating for her colleagues

Jo Hamilton, who ran a post office in South Warnborough, Hampshire, was prosecuted in 2006 and cleared in 2021.

She said her compensation claim "took three and a half years", adding "it must have cost more in legal fees than I actually got".

Criticising delays in paying those still waiting, she said: "If a claim is realistic, why don't they just pay it?"

Hamilton settled at 80% of her claim because of her husband's ill health, but later received the remaining 20%.

She said: "They thought they could probably shut me up by treating me nicely and giving me everything I deserved, but it didn't work because I'm now advocating for my colleagues."

Misra said the Post Office was "carrying on as normal" and nothing had changed.

She said: "It looks like a land of two laws, currently. One law for a common person like me and you, and the other for the people in authorities."

She said she objected to the use of the word "compensation", adding: "It's our own money back we'll be asking for."

Those involved had known it would a long fight, she said, but added: "We didn't expect it to be this long."

The Post Office and Fujitsu have been approached for comment.


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