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By Colletta Smith
Consumer affairs correspondent
A public inquiry into the Post Office scandal is putting pressure on the company and the government to speed up compensation payments to victims.
Chair Sir Wyn Williams will publish a progress report in the coming weeks.
If he is unhappy that the Post Office and the government are not acting on its recommendations, he will issue a formal report to Parliament.
The scandal is described as the most widespread miscarriage of justice in UK history.
A public inquiry, led by the retired judge, has been examining the treatment of thousands of sub-postmasters who were made to pay their own money to cover holes in accounts when a faulty IT system made it look like money was missing from their branches.
More than 700 individuals were given criminal convictions. So far, 81 people have had their convictions quashed.
Interim payments of £100,000 have been made to most, but not all, of those who have been exonerated. No-one has yet received a full and final settlement and thousands more left out of pocket are seeking redress.
Former sub-postmaster Richard Hawkes was one of five people who were exonerated in July, 18 years after being convicted of false accounting.
"Now the weight has been lifted as your character is back as it should be," the 75 year-old told the BBC. But while the fight is over to clear his name, Mr Hawkes is just now beginning the process of claiming compensation for a conviction that left a massive financial hole in his life.
After completing community service, Mr Hawkes eventually managed to find a job cleaning laboratory equipment, where he worked until he was 71 years old.
"Somehow we managed to hang onto the house," he said, although he still has a mortgage. It was only at the start of this year that he finally paid his brother back for a sum of money lent to cover debts the Post Office claimed he owed them.
Some 15 months ago, the Post Office and the government as its sole shareholder, apologised to sub-postmasters and promised swift and fair compensation.
However, many are still waiting. Sharon Brown, a former sub-postmaster in Sunderland and mother-of- two, was accused of theft by the Post Office in 2012 and is furious that her compensation hasn't arrived yet.
She told the BBC she has only survived because of the financial support of relatives, including her sister-in-law who took out a loan on her behalf. At one stage, she had to rely on credit cards to buy food for her family.
"I want my life back," she said. "I want to be able to walk about and hold my head up and say finally 'I got compensation because they did me wrong'.
"They've ruined so many people's lives, it's heart-breaking."
A Post Office spokesperson said: "Our priority is to ensure that there is meaningful compensation for victims and that such events can never happen again."
The public inquiry into the Post Office scandal, which began hearing evidence in June 2021, was set up to examine who was to blame for the wrongful prosecutions and why nothing was done to prevent them.
However, Sir Wyn became so concerned about the slow progress of compensation for sub-postmasters that he took special evidence at hearings in July.
During the inquiry hearings the Post Office admitted that for those without convictions it had expected hundreds of applications for compensation, but had receive thousands. It did not have enough staff to process the claims to begin with, and had so far dealt with the more straightforward claims of lower value.
Jane Hunt, the new Minister for Postal Affairs who replaced Paul Scully, declined to comment on the issue. But she said she looked forward "to continuing [Paul Scully's] excellent work in delivering compensation for postmasters".