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Baljit Sethi cannot understand why it is taking so long for the Post Office to pay him compensation.
"It doesn't seem like they're interested in doing anything," he says.
He is one of thousands of sub-postmasters who lost everything, after the introduction of a faulty IT system made it appear as though money was going missing.
The official inquiry into the scandal is looking into the compensation process for a third time on Thursday.
The inquiry will hear from government, Post Office and legal representatives, after its chairman Sir Wyn Williams said in September he was "disappointed with the apparent lack of substantial progress to date".
The Post Office, which administers the compensation schemes, said it recognised the "importance of ensuring that postmasters receive timely and fair compensation for the failings associated with the Horizon IT system" and pointed to the numbers of people who had already received payments.
The government says "significant progress" has already been made on compensation and
has announced[/size] details of an additional compensation scheme that will begin work next year.
But solicitors for sub-postmasters making claims say the process is too slow.