Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Former Post Office boss returns honour over scandal

Paula Vennells said she had “listened” to the growing clamour to hand back the CBE

Former Post Office boss returns honour over scandal

THE former boss of Britain's Post Office said on Tuesday (9) she will return a royal honour received from Queen Elizabeth II as public anger mounts over a miscarriage of justice scandal.

Former-CEO Paula Vennells said she had "listened" to the growing clamour to hand back the CBE (Commander of the British Empire) honour given to her in 2018 and decided to relinquish it.


A petition calling for her to be stripped of the CBE, handed out "for services to the Post Office and to charity", had garnered more than a million signatures by the start of this week.

It follows renewed focus on what has been described as Britain's biggest ever miscarriage of justice, which saw hundreds of subpostmasters wrongly convicted of theft because of a glitch in accounting software.

"I have listened and I confirm that I return my CBE with immediate effect," Vennells said in a statement.

"I am truly sorry for the devastation caused to the sub-postmasters and their families, whose lives were torn apart by being wrongly accused and wrongly prosecuted as a result of the Horizon system."

Lives were ruined by the false accusations that led to some Post Office branch managers being jailed, going bankrupt, losing their homes and their health.

Four people took their own lives and dozens of those since exonerated died without seeing their names cleared.

The High Court in 2019 ruled that it had been computer errors, not criminality, that had been behind the missing money.

A new TV drama telling the story of the subpostmasters' ordeal at the hands of their own employer has generated a fresh wave of sympathy for the victims -- and pressure on the government to rectify the situation.

Prime minister Rishi Sunak has described the scandal as an "appalling miscarriage of justice" that should "never have happened", and his government has said it is exploring how all the convictions can be quashed.

A public inquiry into the scandal led by retired high court judge Wyn Williams was established in September 2020, and its legal powers were beefed up in June 2021.

In her statement Vennells said she would "continue to support and focus on co-operating with the inquiry" and expects to give evidence "in the coming months".

(AFP)

More For You

Texas Officially Recognizes Holi as a Cultural Celebration

The Senate also acknowledged Holi’s role in strengthening community bonds and enriching the state’s cultural diversity. (Representational image: iStock)

Texas becomes third US state to recognise Holi as a cultural celebration

THE TEXAS Senate has passed its first resolution recognising Holi, formally acknowledging the Hindu festival of colours. With this, Texas becomes the third US state, after Georgia and New York, to officially recognise the festival.

The resolution was introduced by Senator Sarah Eckhardt and was passed ahead of Holi celebrations on March 14. It highlights the festival’s cultural and spiritual significance, marking the arrival of spring, renewal, and the victory of good over evil.

Keep ReadingShow less
Murder Charge Filed Against Pankaj Lamba in Harshita Brella Case
Brella, 24, was found dead in the boot of a car in Ilford, London, in November last year.

Harshita Brella’s death: Murder charge authorised against Pankaj Lamba

A MURDER charge has been authorised against Pankaj Lamba, whose wife, Harshita Brella, was found dead in the boot of a car in London, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said.

Lamba, 23, who is believed to have fled the country, has also been charged with two counts of rape, sexual assault, and controlling or coercive behaviour. The charges were filed at Northampton Magistrates' Court, BBC reported.

Keep ReadingShow less
Court freezes assets tied to Sheikh Hasina and family members

Sheikh Hasina

Court freezes assets tied to Sheikh Hasina and family members

A DHAKA court on Tuesday (18) ordered the freezing of 31 bank accounts linked to ousted prime minister Sheikh Hasina, her family members and their associates over corruption allegations against them, according to media reports.

According to the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC), the bank accounts – belonging to Hasina, her son Sajeeb Wazed Joy, daughter Saima Wazed Putul, sister Sheikh Rehana, nephew Radwan Mujib Siddiq Bobby and their related organisations - hold a total of Tk 3.9 billion (£24.9 million), reports Prothom Alo.

Keep ReadingShow less
India urges US ‘to censure Sikh
separatist outfit as terror threat’

Rajnath Singh and Tulsi Gabbard in New Delhi on Monday (17)

India urges US ‘to censure Sikh separatist outfit as terror threat’

INDIA has asked the US to list a Sikh separatist group as a terrorist organisation, an Indian government source said on Tuesday (18).

This comes more than a year after the US announced it had foiled a plot with Indian links to assassinate a leader of the group in the US. Washington went public about the plot in November 2023 and later charged a former Indian spy officer with directing the attempt on Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, a dual US-Canada citizen and the general counsel of Sikhs for Justice (SFJ), in an episode that tested the growing India-US friendship.

Keep ReadingShow less
Balochistan universities closed due to 'security concerns' after siege

Pakistan’s Frontier Corps inspect the site of a militant ambush on a train in Pehro Kunri, Balochistan, last Saturday (15)

Balochistan universities closed due to 'security concerns' after siege

PAKISTAN’S volatile Balochistan province ordered the closure of three universities in recent weeks due to “security concerns,” an official said on Tuesday (18), as separatist attacks surge in the region.

Two universities in the provincial capital of Quetta were ordered to close for an “indefinite period” last week, while on Tuesday, a third was instructed to switch to virtual learning, a provincial administration official said on condition of anonymity as he was not authorised to speak to the media.

Keep ReadingShow less