logo
U.K. post office scandal may have caused 13 suicides: inquiry

U.K. post office scandal may have caused 13 suicides: inquiry

Japan Times3 days ago
Thirteen people caught up in a faulty accounting software scandal at British Post Office branches may have killed themselves and 59 more contemplated doing so, a public inquiry report published Tuesday said.
The Post Office wrongfully prosecuted around 1,000 subpostmasters — self-employed branch managers — between 1999 and 2015.
Errors in tech giant Fujitsu's Legacy Horizon accounting software incorrectly made it appear that money was missing from their accounts.
Many ended up bankrupt after being forced by the Post Office to pay back the missing funds. Some were jailed.
Dozens who were later exonerated died without ever seeing their names cleared.
Inquiry chair Wyn Williams said that there was a "real possibility" that 13 people killed themselves as a result of their ordeal.
Ten people attempted to take their own lives and 59 contemplated it, the report into the scandal found.
Many of the prosecutions took place after questions were raised about the software's reliability.
Police are investigating possible fraud committed during the scandal.
"I am satisfied from the evidence that I have heard that a number of senior, and not-so-senior employees of the Post Office knew or, at the very least should have known, that Legacy Horizon was capable of error," Williams said in the report.
"Yet ... the Post Office maintained the fiction that its data was always accurate," he added.
A "number of senior" people at the Post Office were aware the system was capable of error before it was changed in 2010, he said.
Welcoming the findings, former branch manager Jo Hamilton said the report showed "the full scale of the horror that they unleashed on us."
Williams described the picture of the scandal that had emerged as "profoundly disturbing."
"Many thousands of people have suffered serious financial detriment. Many people have inevitably suffered emotional turmoil and significant stress.
"Many businesses and homes have been lost. Bankruptcies have occurred, marriage and families have been wrecked," he said.
Among those who gave evidence to the inquiry was former Post Office chief executive Paula Vennells who was quizzed about what she knew and when.
Vennells broke down in tears when recalling the case of one man who took his own life after being wrongly accused over a £39,000 ($49,537) shortfall at his branch.
The long-running saga hit the headlines after the broadcast in January 2024 of a television drama about the managers' ordeal, which generated a wave of sympathy and outrage.
Fujitsu's European director Paul Patterson told a parliamentary committee later that the firm, which assisted the Post Office in prosecutions using flawed data from the software, was "truly sorry" for "this appalling miscarriage of justice."
Many of those involved are still battling for compensation.
The government's Department for Business and Trade (DBT) said last month that 7,569 claims out of the 11,208 received had now been paid, leaving 3,709 still to be settled.
Alan Bates, a former branch manager who led the fight for justice, has said the compensation process has "turned into quasi-kangaroo courts."
Bates, who was awarded a knighthood by King Charles III for his campaign to highlight the scandal, told the Sunday Times newspaper in May the DBT "sits in judgment of the claims and alters the goal posts as and when it chooses."
Post Office Minister Gareth Thomas said last month the government had made it a priority to speed up the delivery of compensation since taking office in July 2024.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nippon Steel plans new U.S. mill to compete against Chinese
Nippon Steel plans new U.S. mill to compete against Chinese

Asahi Shimbun

time21 hours ago

  • Asahi Shimbun

Nippon Steel plans new U.S. mill to compete against Chinese

Eiji Hashimoto, chairman and chief executive officer of Nippon Steel Corp., speaks during an interview on July 8. (Kotaro Ebara) Nippon Steel Corp. will construct a new mill in the United States through U.S. Steel, its subsidiary, as it seeks to close the gap on global leader China Baowu Steel Group Corp., its chief executive said. 'We cannot allow Chinese rivals to catch up in cutting-edge technologies,' Eiji Hashimoto told The Asahi Shimbun in a recent interview. 'Toward that end, we need to expand production volume.' Japan's top steelmaker, which acquired U.S. Steel for about $14 billion (2 trillion yen) in June, will begin investing in the new U.S. mill by 2028. It will be the company's first new plant after the one it built in Oita Prefecture in 1971. Nippon Steel, which led the world in crude steel output from the 1970s to the 1990s, ranked fourth in 2024 at about 44 million tons. The same year, China Baowu Steel Group produced about 130 million tons, followed by Europe-based ArcelorMittal SA, which generated about 65 million tons. Nippon Steel plans to more than double its crude steel output to at least 100 million tons within 10 years by bolstering operations at U.S. Steel, an Indian joint venture and a manufacturing base in Thailand. In the process, Hashimoto, who is also chairman of the company, said he intends to propel U.S. Steel back to the top of the American steel industry. U.S. Steel, which produced about 14 million tons of crude steel last year, was the third-largest player in the United States. In addition to building the new mill, Nippon Steel plans to enhance capacity utilization at existing plants and implement other measures to raise U.S. Steel's crude steel output to at least 34 million tons in 10 years. Employees who were involved in the construction of Nippon Steel's last plant a half-century ago no longer remain with the company. Hashimoto said engineers and other workers will be sent to the United States and trained for the construction of the new mill. Nippon Steel, meanwhile, is scaling back operations in China, the world's largest steel market. Last summer, the company announced the discontinuation of an automotive steel sheet joint venture with Baoshan Iron and Steel Co., a subsidiary of China Baowu Steel Group. With relations between the United States and China becoming increasingly strained on economic and national security issues, Hashimoto is accelerating a shift toward the United States. 'In business, we lose unless we stand by someone who formulates international rules,' he said. 'When we must choose between the United States and China, it is taken for granted that Japan will side with the United States.'

AI-generated child abuse webpages surge 400%, alarming watchdog
AI-generated child abuse webpages surge 400%, alarming watchdog

Japan Times

timea day ago

  • Japan Times

AI-generated child abuse webpages surge 400%, alarming watchdog

Reports of child sexual abuse imagery created using artificial intelligence tools have surged 400% in the first half of 2025, according to new data from the U.K.-based nonprofit organization Internet Watch Foundation. The organization, which monitors child sexual abuse material online, recorded 210 webpages containing AI-generated material in the first six months of 2025, up from 42 in the same period the year before, according to a report published this week. On those pages were 1,286 videos, up from just two in 2024. The majority of this content was so realistic it had to be treated under U.K. law as if it were actual footage, the IWF said. Roughly 78% of the videos — 1,006 in total — were classified as "Category A,' the most severe level, which can include depictions of rape, sexual torture and bestiality, the IWF said. Most of the videos involved girls and in some cases used the likenesses of real children. The growing prevalence of AI-generated child abuse material has alarmed law enforcement worldwide. As generative AI tools become more accessible and sophisticated, the quality of the pictures and videos are improving, making it harder than ever to detect using traditional techniques. While early videos were short and glitchy, the IWF now sees longer, more realistic productions featuring complex scenes and varied settings. Authorities say the content is often used for harassment and extortion. "Just as we saw with still images, AI videos of child sexual abuse have now reached the point they can be indistinguishable from genuine films,' said Derek Ray-Hill, interim chief executive of the IWF. "The children being depicted are often real and recognizable, the harm this material does is real and the threat it poses threatens to escalate even further.' The IWF doesn't know exactly why these materials are proliferating so quickly, Ray-Hill said, but 'we can assume that it's because AI tools have become increasingly cheap and easy to access and also increasingly easy to train.' With a single prompt, he said, a user 'can generate 50 images, taking about 15 to 20 seconds each, in the case of child sexual abuse material.' Law enforcement agencies are starting to take action. In a coordinated operation earlier this year, Europol arrested 25 individuals in connection with distributing such material. More than 250 suspects were identified across 19 countries, Bloomberg reported. The IWF called for the U.K. to develop a regulatory framework to ensure AI models have controls to block the production of this type of material. In February, the U.K. became the first country to criminalize the creation and distribution of AI tools intended to generate child abuse content. The law bans possession of AI models optimized to produce such material, as well as manuals that instruct offenders on how to do so. In the U.S., the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children — an IWF counterpart — said it received over 7,000 reports related to AI-generated child sexual abuse content in 2024. While most commercial AI tools include safeguards against generating abusive content, some open-source or custom models lack these protections, making them vulnerable to misuse.

'We go on living': Kyiv embraces city routines after nights of terror
'We go on living': Kyiv embraces city routines after nights of terror

Japan Times

timea day ago

  • Japan Times

'We go on living': Kyiv embraces city routines after nights of terror

At night, Kyiv's skies are lit by fire and boom with explosions, but by morning the streets thrum in a style familiar to any European capital, its Gen Z teens on ride-share scooters speeding past impeccably dressed executives en route to work. One quote that captures the mood and has become popular on social media platforms in Ukraine says Kyiv looks like the famously glitzy Mediterranean city state Monaco by day, "and at night, like Afghanistan" during its war-torn years. The city of 3 million people has endured several consecutive weeks of escalating deadly Russian drone and missile attacks. But, determined to hold on to some normality, many of its residents are living their daily routines with verve. Shortly after dawn on Thursday, Lycra-clad joggers and cyclists emerged from homes near a downtown apartment block hit hours before by a Russian bomb. Firefighters who had worked in hours of darkness to extinguish the blaze packed up hoses. Street sweepers cleared away a carpet of glass and shrapnel. A boy plays on a bench near a residential building, which was damaged during Russian drone and missile strikes, while his parents clean up in their apartment, in Kyiv on Thursday. | REUTERS Around the corner, a hip, third-generation coffee shop opened its doors, part of a cafe scene that has thrived in the three and a half years since Russia's full-scale invasion of its smaller neighbor. A young businessman stopped in for a morning brew. Adorned with stylish sunglasses and a fluffy white dog in her arms, 66-year-old Antonina stood near the charred building. "I came, I looked around, I cried a bit," she said. But, she said, she was ready for the day. "We go on living." People leave a shelter with their belongings near a damaged shopping center after a night of Russian strikes in Kyiv on Thursday. | AFP-Jiji Across the street from the charred apartments, business owner Dmytro Yatsenko surveyed the damage to his nail salon, whose plate glass windows had been shattered by the blast. Black and white CCTV video he showed Reuters captured the moment shards exploded into his shop. "It was just about coming here right away to fix everything and getting back to work," said Yatsenko, 40, who said he was relieved none of his employees were hurt. The capital's streets buzz throughout the day. In the afternoon, benches beneath trees provide shade for couples. By the evening, fashionistas in elegant dresses grace sidewalks outside popular restaurants. Until the air raid warnings begin again. Residents clear debris in the street following Russian air strikes in a residential area of Kyiv on Thursday. | bloomberg Other Kyiv residents expressed resignation over the increasing rhythm of attacks since diplomatic efforts to end the war, now in its fourth year, stalled. Many said they were grateful to the country's soldiers for making it possible for life and work to continue in Kyiv. In Thursday's bombardment, Russia launched around 400 drones and 18 missiles at Kyiv and several other regions, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said. Two people were killed, 25 wounded and damages were reported in nearly every district in Kyiv. A day earlier, Russia had fired a record 728 drones at Ukraine. "I took a cold shower, drank two coffees, sat and thought for a bit, realized that for now, I can't change anything, then went to work," said 24-year-old translator Kateryna, waiting at a bus stop. "That's it."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store