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Sir Alan Bates, founder of Justice for Subpostmasters Alliance, before a public accounts committee hearing on government compensation schemes on Monday. Photograph: House of Commons/UK Parliament/PA View image in fullscreen Sir Alan Bates, founder of Justice for Subpostmasters Alliance, before a public accounts committee hearing on government compensation schemes on Monday. Photograph: House of Commons/UK Parliament/PA ‘Utter disaster’: Alan Bates attacks schemes compensating post office operators Government should not be involved in providing redress to victims of Horizon IT scandal, campaigner tells MPs Sir Alan Bates has said that the schemes set up to compensate post office operators over the Horizon IT scandal have been an “utter disaster” and that the government should not be involved in running them. Bates, who led a two-decade fight for justice for thousands of subpostmasters falsely accused and wrongfully convicted for theft and false accounting, has previously accused the government of presiding over a “quasi-kangaroo court” system for compensation. “I’d have to say they were an utter disaster to be quite frank,” he told the public accounts committee of MPs on Monday. “There are so many reasons why they were wrong and why they caused so much grief, even nowadays. There is a fundamental problem with all of these schemes. That is that the government shouldn’t be involved with them. That is the biggest mistake about the whole thing.” Inquiry into Post Office Horizon scandal faces five-year delay without extra funding Read more Bates said that discussions about the design and implementation of schemes for redress and compensation “started quite well” but ultimately became too complex and “legalistic” by the time they were implemented. “They did listen to a lot of our points,” he said. “But the scheme that came out at the end seemed so different. The first thing the department did was go out and hire an expensive team of lawyers to put the scheme together. It got bogged down. It has got so legalistic [which] turned it into this enormously complex and threatening thing for victims. Most victims just want a fair outcome. They just want to move on”. Bates finally agreed a multimillion-pound settlement with the government in November , more than two decades after he began the campaign for justice for post office operators over the Horizon IT scandal. He said that many subpostmasters failed to come forward to seek redress and compensation, even when contacted by the government, because “they had lost trust in the system”. “The civil service just grinds [schemes] into the ground,” he said. “The government has to be involved at the highest level. It probably has to fund it – in our case until the real guilty [parties] cough up towards it as well - [but] it has to be [run by] an independent body. I think true independence would be very key. It has to be a totally independent body seen to act independently and have authority to do so.” The latest UK

Be respectful and constructive. Comments are moderated.
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Alan Bates critique is spot on. The government should focus on transparency, not compensation. Trust in public institutions is essential for a healthy society. Lets demand accountability and stop rewarding incompetence.

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Trust in public institutions is vital. Lets prioritize transparency, not compensation. #PublicAccountability #PostOfficeReform

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Compensation schemes for post office operators might be a band-aid, but transparency and accountability should be the real priority. #PublicTrust

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Compensation schemes may offer temporary relief, but transparency and accountability should be our top priorities to rebuild public trust. #PublicTrust

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Absolutely! Transparency and accountability are crucial. Lets aim for solutions that rebuild trust and confidence in the post office system.

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Absolutely! Transparency and accountability are key. Lets strive for solutions that rebuild trust while ensuring operators are fairly compensated. #RebuildWithIntegrity

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While transparency and accountability are crucial, compensation schemes can provide immediate relief and stability for struggling operators. Lets address both issues together for lasting reform. #PostOfficeReform

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While compensation is important, transparency and accountability in public institutions are crucial. Lets focus on rebuilding trust rather than providing handouts.

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Transparency and accountability are vital. We must seek solutions that rebuild trust and confidence in our postal system.