Parmod Kalia 1958 – 2026

Parmod Kalia at the Frontline Club in 2022

Parmod Kalia has died. He was 67.

His family announced the news on Tuesday, saying “our beloved husband, father, grandfather, brother and uncle has passed away. He was a guiding light in our lives. His love, wisdom and warmth will stay with us always.”

Parmod was one of the most decent men I have ever met. We first spoke in 2018 on the first day of Bates v Post Office at the High Court. This is how I described our meeting in my book:

“Before the afternoon session started I spotted a small, middle-aged man who had been sitting on his own at the back of court, staring straight ahead. There were, occasionally, tears in his eyes. He didn’t seem to be with anyone, so I introduced myself. The man’s name was Parmod Kalia. He was a claimant. He didn’t know any other claimants. In fact, he didn’t know anything about the Postmasters’ campaign for justice until 2015. Until then, Parmod had spent more than a decade living in penury after being sent to prison for theft. Parmod’s career began in 1977 as a bank teller at NatWest. He was 18 years old. Parmod worked his way up to the post of assistant manager by the time he left NatWest in 1989. He had handled money all his adult career. Through hard graft and prudent saving, he put enough aside to take over a retail business with a Post Office attached on Chipperfield Road, in Orpington.

Parmod successfully ran his Post Office from 1990 to 2001 without a single problem. Then Horizon was installed.
In 2001, Parmod’s Post Office was ‘audited.’ His Horizon system showed a £22,000 hole in his accounts. He was immediately suspended. Parmod says he contacted his local NFSP rep, whose only response was to ask how quickly
he could make the discrepancy good to ‘keep it out of the courts.’ Desperate, Parmod went to his mother (who knew nothing about the situation) and asked for a loan. He then handed the Post Office a cheque for the full amount.

Once the Post Office had the money, Parmod was sacked and charged with theft. No one suggested for a moment the Horizon system might be at fault, so it was down to Parmod to prove he didn’t steal the money at his trial. Parmod’s legal team knew it could end badly. If he was found guilty by a jury, he was almost certainly looking at a prison sentence. They suggested he plead guilty to reduce that risk. Parmod was further advised to make up a story about borrowing the ‘missing’ money from his branch in order to mitigate his sentence. He did as advised, and was sent to prison anyway.

The years immediately following his conviction were hard. Not knowing what had happened at his Post Office, Parmod blamed himself. His family blamed him too, for the shame he had brought on them and their ruined prospects and reputations within the community. Relationships broke down, increasing Parmod’s feelings of worthlessness. He hid what happened from his mother, fearing the truth might kill her. Parmod tried to end his own life on three separate occasions. He thought he was the only one dealing with inexplicable discrepancies at his branch and blamed himself for everything that happened.

Parmod eventually found fulfilment in voluntary and social work, but the ‘audit’ which ruined his life, his sacking, subsequent prosecution by the Post Office and prison sentence left him fragile. ‘It completely broke me, on reflection,’ Parmod told me. ‘At the time I was dumbstruck. It didn’t really hit me as much as it does now.’
Fourteen years after being given a prison sentence, losing everything and trying to bury what happened, Parmod saw the 2015 Panorama.

For Parmod, it was a revelation. He wrote to Paula Vennells, the Post Office chief executive, telling her what happened to him must have been as a result of a Horizon error, as per the allegations being made in the Panorama programme. He could see no other reason for it. He sent Ms Vennells all the evidence he had. It is typical of Parmod’s decency that he did not demand Vennells re-open or review his case. He just asked for an apology for what the Post Office had done to him.

He received a reply from Angela van den Bogerd. Years later, Parmod sent it to me. Van den Bogerd wrote:
‘The Panorama programme you refer to in your letter included a number of inaccurate statements, drawn selectively from limited information, to create a misleading and damaging impression of how and why Post Office undertook prosecutions.’

Van den Bogerd told Parmod the Post Office had ‘exhaustively investigated’ Horizon and not identified ‘any transaction caused by a technical fault with Horizon which resulted in a Postmaster wrongly being held responsible for a loss of money.’

Fifteen months before the Post Office would be admitting in court that remote access was perfectly possible, van den Bogerd told Parmod there was ‘no evidence’ of transactions recorded by branches ‘being altered through “remote access” to the system. Horizon does not have functionality that allows Post Office or Fujitsu to edit or delete the transactions recorded by branches.’ Van den Bogerd finished her letter by telling Parmod, ‘If you believe that you have been subject to a miscarriage of justice, you should take independent legal advice. The solicitor who acted for you on the prosecution, or the Citizens Advice Bureau may be able to help you.’

On the day of our first meeting, as Parmod told me his story, I noticed he had difficulty looking me in the eye. It was a condition he told me he’d developed in the years after his release from prison. I asked him why he’d come along to court. ‘It’s important,’ he said. ‘There are people here who can put the case forward that there were problems in the computer system. And I can understand now that there were many others in the same position as me.’
We swapped numbers.”

The Post Office continued to torment Parmod by counting him as one of what they called the “public interest” cases. The first thing Parmod did on receiving his interim compensation was provide for his family and buy a new minibus for the charity which took him in and saved his life.

Parmod died waiting for final compensation.

Parmod Kalia 6th December 1958 – 13th March 2026


44 responses to “Parmod Kalia 1958 – 2026”

  1. Sally Stringer avatar

    Nick, a truly fitting tribute to a kind,compassionate, caring man. We laughed and cried at the Inquiry and had to watch corrupt politicians , POL,DBT and Fijitzu all commit perjury. lie and deceive. It is now however, whilst awaiting Sir Wyns final report, absolutely tragic and simply wicked that the DBT, POL, HMG and their corrupt legals can effectively kill people by stealth .This bunch of scumbags seriously needs shaming.
    How dare they dispute quantified accountant claims put forward by our lawyers, Then , when the disgraceful pittance that they reduced the claim to eventually goes to an independent panel , you are expected to conduct the dreadful traumatic process of a zoom meeting from a hospital bed.
    There is no decency or compassion in this process and claims need to be met in full before more die.
    Postmasters have been and still are absolutely traumatised by this process and the dirty money that eventually drops into a bank account can never ever heal the shame and distress caused to us all.
    Parmod was so right in the fact that those lost years can never be brought back and it is crucial that he is never forgotten .
    Sir Wyns report will be absolutely damning exposing the lies and deception ,and I sincerely hope that those who oversaw and benefitted from this disgusting miscarriage of justice pay dearly.
    The politicians have to learn that actions speak louder than words and that Sir Wyns report will need very difficult decisions to be taken and the .Civil service needs a very serious clear out .
    we will not let this issue be confined to the tick box brigade

  2. Ultimately we all hope that justice will be done and the (many)perpretrators of the miscarriage of justice will be brought to trial.
    In the meantime, there is perhaps some comfort in the fact those perpretrators are living a life with the almost inevitable thought that the next knock on their door could be from the police with an arrest warrant for coercion/pervertng the course of justice etc, and that their world will come “crashing down” just as that happened to the victims of their perverted actions.

  3. Steven Wiktor Ksiezak avatar
    Steven Wiktor Ksiezak

    I remeber when Vennells and Co were being interviewed at the enquiry. There was very little connection between their hollow apologies, the wealth they had acrued and the utter injustice they metted out to people like Parmod, and still they do not meet their obligations to right an obvious wrong.

    I hope that some recompense comes soon to Parmod’s family.

    And Nick, keep up the good work. It’s only people like you that offer any sort of protection at all from these corporate animals.

  4. christopher rodney lowndes salmon avatar
    christopher rodney lowndes salmon

    Wonderful moving article, thank you.
    You’d like to think Ed Davey, the clown master would take some involvement in this awful situation, but no, he washed his grubby hands of it and walked away with £275 thousand from the firm of solicitors handling the prosecutions. It is a shame on our country that this man is still in a prominent political position, a truly ghastly human being.

    1. Ed Davey and £275k is not something I have heard of. Could you point me, and possibly others to the full details of this. Perhaps I have missed an article here. Did this come up at the PO enquiry?

  5. Shameful, hideous, and treacherous are just a few words that describe these lawbreakers. Terms such as “government corruption,” “bribery,” and “kickbacks” → Senate Evidence File No 21 Senate Hansard dated 27 Feb 1998 re kick-backs and bribes have become all too prevalent in arbitration and mediation in Australia.

    The Alan Bates vs British Post Office story – Absent Justice

    On March 18, 2026, in Britain, another exemplary individual fell victim to the oppressive forces of the British Establishment. This person, like countless others, bravely chose to stand up for the values instilled in us during childhood: the importance of honouring the truth and living a life guided by integrity. Sadly, these principles seem increasingly disregarded by many Western nations and their institutions.

    I would like to draw your attention to my heartfelt tribute to Ruth Durasnt Durant, available at https://shorturl.at/v05xJ. This tribute is shared on behalf of the Australian Casualties of Telstra (COT) group. Those of us who remain will understand the critical need to support individuals who, like Parmod, strive to lead honest and principled lives.

    The tribute will remain on the homepage for all of this month

    As a united voice from our COT group, we extend our deepest condolences. I encourage you to take a moment to read my message to Durant Durant, as it sheds light on the values we hold dear and the importance of standing up for the truth.

    Alan Bates vs British Post Office

    After almost two decades, the British public—and a growing number of British politicians—have insisted that the British Post Office scandal is a matter of profound public interest and must no longer be concealed by the government, the civil service, or the Establishment. For England’s sake, this injustice demands a complete and transparent investigation. Click here to watch the Australian Channel 7 trailer for Mr Bates vs the Post Office, which aired in February 2024, and captures the scale of this national betrayal.

    What makes the scandal so disturbing is that public servants inside the British Post Office knew the Fujitsu Horizon computer software was responsible for the catastrophic accounting and billing errors. Yet they continued to blame innocent sub‑postmasters, many of whom were financially ruined, prosecuted, or imprisoned.

    This pattern is painfully familiar to those of us who lived through the Australian COT arbitrations. Dr Gordon Hughes, the arbitrator appointed to oversee our cases, refused to allow his own technical consultants the additional time they needed to diagnose the ongoing faults in Telstra’s Ericsson billing software. The parallels between the British Post Office scandal and the Australian Telstra scandal are unmistakable. In both cases, faulty technical equipment was at the heart of the problem, as demonstrated in this YouTube video: https://youtu.be/MyhjuR5g1Mc..

    Click here to watch Mr Bates vs the Post Office

  6. I first met Parmod in the Rolls Building at the “Fraser trials” but regrettably never spoke with him. On hearing of his sad passing I researched to find evidence of his passing exams to qualify as an Associate of the Institute of Bankers, but no evidence of his actual membership of this highly reputable body of people. Nonetheless as a former Fellow of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW) myself, it occurs to me that Parmod and I both had a background in senior financial management with huge FTSE 100 companies which doubtless would have impressed the HR people in the PO…as indeed did every other Sub Postmaster that was accepted as “suitable people” to be offered a contract to be entrusted with the safeguarding the assets of the Company. Extraordinary to believe therefore that so many hundred of us were suddenly considered to have “turned rogue” and become thieves and cheats. That is what hurts people like Parmod and all of us who were prosecuted by, what everyone will learn, was such an appalling calibre of management throughout the Post Office.

  7. This is very sad. It is also so wrong that innocent people are dying with no sign of the compensation which would make their lives so much better. Meanwhile the disgraced but as yet, unconvicted Paula Vennels is free to enjoy her life on the huge settlement she received.

  8. Dear Nick
    Thank you for writing about such a lovely man. Yet another death for which the Post Office is responsible. All of us are sickened by the dragging out of the compensation scheme & the fact that no-one has been put behind bars for the lies that POL told. Rest in peace now, Parmod, my condolences to his family.

  9. Where are the criminal prosecutions against the Post Office Managers, i.e. Paula Vennel and cohorts and Fujitsu and Horizon. Shame on the Governments and Police for their incompetence and failure to bring these people to book and for their incompetence failure to rectify the wrongs perpetrated against the Sub Postmasters and Mistresess

  10. Nick, the horrors of this sad business just seem to go on and on. We hoped that with the general pardon granted by Parliament matters of compensation. would be expedited without further delay. Nothing could ever fully compensate for the suffering of Parmod (and so many others) but to see him sadly pass away without proper recognition of the injustice caused to him by the PO and Fujitsu is tragic. I hope that Sir Wyn Williams’ final Inquiry report will identify and seek retribution against those responsible that have so far escaped justice. I also pray that when the full story is told in your second book, lessons will be learnt and we shall never again witness such disgusting corporate behaviour resulting in such tragedy.

  11. Nicholas Edwards avatar
    Nicholas Edwards

    This is so sad. And why it is so important for us all to keep fighting for full justice. Not just for Postmasters but for the management of the Post Office, their legal advisors and Fujitsu.

  12. michael freeman avatar
    michael freeman

    As ever with this awful miscarriage of justice case yet another story that brings tears to my eyes . It is shameful that people in authority behaved the way they did and individuals such as this gentleman were tormented until they passed away .

    Thank you Nick for continuing to shed light on this truly on this debacle .

    RIP

  13. Nick, great post and thank you. Are you able to share with your audience n update on where the Police Investigation is up to, please nd a general update on this dreadful state of events.

  14. this sad news has brought me to tears, we must not let the post office delay paying compensation any longer, they are clearly just holding out to these honest, loyal and mistreated post office works pass away

  15. Thank you Nick for keeping us all updated. So sad about Parmod, a decent honest man ruined by evil people……when will these horrible people face the full consequences of their actions. ………..
    Hope his compensation is properly paid to his family and need to track that it is please….

  16. William David Pritchard avatar
    William David Pritchard

    Words fail me, this Country, is beyond cruel.

  17. A very moving story that demonstrates how vindictive corporate fools can destroy decent honest people (with the able assistance of the legal profession in this case, as in others). How much longer must we wait for the day of reckoning in court for the bad actors? Is that process even on-going Nick? I’ve lost track. Thanks as always for your work to keep this scandal in the public mind.

  18. Ruth Durrant Durrant avatar
    Ruth Durrant Durrant

    Goodness, a dreadful story, taking the money, prosecuting anyway, advising him to plead guilty and then messing around with compensation, honestly

    1. Dear Ruth Durant Durrant,

      I hope this message finds you well. I am one of the four founding members of the Australian Casualties of Telstra (COT) group, a collective formed to seek justice for the devastating impacts we experienced due to telecommunications issues. In 1994, we took our claims to arbitration, and like many affected by the tragic British Post Office scandal, our lives were irrevocably changed in our pursuit of accountability.

      As I reflect on your journey and the struggles faced by those impacted by the British Post Office Horizon IT scandal, I want you to know that my thoughts are with you and your community during this challenging time. Today, I honored the memory of Parmod by placing a tribute on my website—a small gesture to acknowledge the profound loss felt by so many.

      I have been closely following the tragic saga of injustice stemming from the Post Office’s use of the notoriously flawed Fujitsu Horizon system. This technological failure has caused immense suffering, much like our own experience with the Ericsson AXE telephone system in Australia, which severely affected numerous businesses reliant on telephone services. The ripple effects of such failures have been far-reaching, and many members of the Australian COT group have engaged with this narrative, driven by a quest for truth.

      Please accept my heartfelt sympathy for all those affected by the British Post Office scandal. You are not alone in your fight for justice, and I stand in solidarity with you.

      Warm regards,
      Alan Smith

      1. I to have followed this disgraceful situation in Britain. I do hope those in Australia get justice in your fight to clear their names. Also that you manage to hold those responsible for allowing this situation to be covered up for so long. It would appear here in Britain NO Politicians, Members of the Board or Senior Management have received what most Post Office employees that have been effected by this horrendous behaviour by a substantial number of the above. Jail sentences and names removed from holding similar positions at any point in the future would appear appropriate, if found complicit in court cases they should face. Good luck with your fight it would appear you still have an uphill struggle on your hands.

  19. Andrea Edwards avatar

    This whole story gives me chills. It didn’t happen to me but Parmod is everyone and it brings me to tears to read about his heartbreaking life story and revelations of such a miscarriage of justice after dealing with the Post Office and that god awful Fujitsu Horizon system. May Parmod rest in peace and his family be strong to pursue a posthumous pardon. The idea that anyone would go to prison for this is wrenching enough let alone being innocent. The justice system failed in their advice. Nothing in this man’s life would have shown any criminality. The deceit or indifference of our government who owned PO and an executive team under Paula Vennells and others, is a sign that we cannot trust our government nor our institutions to act with any duty of care, integrity and morality compass any more. Fujitsu has to answer to this as well.

    1. So eloquently put. You echo my sentiments exactly Andrea.

  20. How many more SPMs will die without receiving ALL the compensation they deserve (or, at least, the amount they can wring out of the hands of the tight-fisted hands of the PO lawyers)? RIP Mr Kalia, your torment is over. Sincere condolences to your family.

  21. What a terrible story. I am used to the detail of the harm done by the Post Office. But this is among the worst. It hits with the same shock and outrage as if it were the first story I read. This poor, brave, decent man.

    1. Hear, hear

  22. Peter Backhouse avatar
    Peter Backhouse

    This is a tragedy. I remember reading about him in your book and the horrible way the Post Office had treated him. Surely Van den Bogerd’s reply is evidence of corruption.

    1. The whole set up is riddled with corruption and corporate (you are the only one) lies. The PO mob knew their vile Fujitsu monster was ripping off innocent SPM’s all over the country but why did they allow it to happen? Because the monster was raking in the loot, and there is no other way to describe it. This vile nasty affair should have been passed to the SFO at the outset. I can’t wait to read Nick Wallis’s “The Great Post Office Cover Up”. I have already read his “The Great Post Office Scandal” and also Jo Hamilton and Scott Darlington’s books. Everybody should.

    2. Paula Vennells and Angela van den Bogerd
      Need to face justice for lying For what they WERE responsible for
      Locking them up is not really justice,suffering for all the rest of your
      There life is a must may they will have to answer to the devil ultimately

  23. Louise McAllister avatar
    Louise McAllister

    Rest his soul.

  24. Jeffery Hooper avatar

    And so it goes on. Innocent, decent people falsley prosecuted and imprisoned by the “swift arm of the law” whilst it’s taking years for the perpetrators to be brought to account.

  25. Nice words Nick. Parmod sounds like a good man. Someone I would like as a friend. I’m pleased Parmod lived to see and know that he wasn’t to blame. I think his legal counsels advice was appalling in advising him to admit what wasn’t true. He died too young, like some others.

    RIP Parmod.

  26. This is so tragic. Why is he still waiting for final compensation, heartbreaking. Thank you for keeping on with telling us what is still going on

  27. There are some hideous people in this country. It is time they were behind bars.

  28. I am sickened by what happened to Parmod Kalia, as I am by the whole Post Office scandal. It is shameful to the PO and the respective governments that it took an ITV programme to get a proper investigation going. It is a scandalous example of the powerful screwing the small people. I very much hope that the successive Chairmen of the Post Office will be prosecuted. They surely carry the responsibility for the wretched failures to listen, act, and then to tell the truth.

  29. Winnie Elfferich avatar
    Winnie Elfferich

    Hi Nick, thank you for this moving article about the death of another one of the post office scandal heroes.
    I’ve followed your reporting on this huge scandal for years now and will stay doing so.
    It is heartbreaking and so very infuriating what happened, and still does, to all the postmasters.

    Thanks again
    Winnie
    The Netherlands

  30. john osullivan avatar

    Thank you Nick.So many good people on this side of the wall

  31. We have lost a thoroughly decent man whose life was ruined by the Post Office. It is terrible that he died without receiving final compensation for the appalling wrongs he suffered.
    RIP Parmod

  32. I am so sorry for your great loss, so very sad.

  33. This is very sad. It is also so wrong that innocent people are dying with no sign of the compensation which would make their lives so much better. Meanwhile the disgraced but as yet, unconvicted Paula Vennels is free to enjoy her life on the huge settlement she received.

  34. What a tragedy! I didn’t think I could be any more shocked. My heart breaks for him and his family.

    The PO and Fujitsu are a disgrace! It’s shameful.

  35. Another wholly unnecessary yet devastating loss due to the corrupt English legal system and the uncaring Labour government. Just pay out all the compensation due immediately and prosecute those who committed perjury. How long can this sad saga continue to be dragged out.

  36. Thank you for sharing Parmod’s story – it will help keep his memory alive. It is appalling that this injustice persists.

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