Friday, May 06, 2011

London surgeon held in Dubai after raising hands at motorist

A prominent London surgeon has been detained in Dubai on a charge of "public indecency" after an altercation with a motorist. Joseph Nunoo-Mensah, a consultant colorectal surgeon at King's College Hospital, London, had his passport confiscated following the incident on 26 April in which he is alleged to have made a rude gesture. He has been told he could face a prison sentence and a wait of "months" before his case is heard.

At King's, cancer patients awaiting surgery have had their operations reallocated to other surgeons. Dr Nunoo-Mensah was travelling with his wife, Alison Walker, and three children and was due to return to the UK on 1 May. Ms Walker and the children instead returned alone. Dr Nunoo-Mensah said: "The man was following us flashing his lights. I was trying to abide by the speed limit and couldn't move out of his way.



"I pulled over when I could but instead of overtaking us, he pulled up alongside, switched the inside light on, rolled down the window and drove in parallel with us for up to a minute. He was looking at me in an intimidating way – I was quite terrified. I raised both my hands to say, 'What do you want?' but he pulled back [to read the number plate] and then took off and turned right. He alleges I stuck a finger at him but I raised both hands. I am sure he must have seen them at an angle, and that was offensive to him."

Dr Nunoo-Mensah was called by the police the following day and had his passport confiscated. Without it he has been unable to get a hotel room and has been sleeping on the office couch of some Ghanaian contacts – his father, General Nunoo-Mensah, is a senior minister and national security adviser to the president of Ghana. A spokesperson for the Foreign Office said it would provide assistance: "The UAE laws and customs are very different to those in the UK. There may be serious penalties for doing something that might not be illegal in the UK and we cannot interfere in another country's legal procedures, just as they cannot interfere in ours."

7 comments:

Insolitus said...

Oh, Dubai, you again. I can't understand why people voluntarily travel there.

L said...

Me either. I don't think I could relax if I ever went there; I'd always be fearful of doing something wrong and ending up in jail (or worse).

Anonymous said...

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/01/world/middleeast/01dubai.html

Ewan said...

i think its more complicated then it seems, most likly he insulted either a plain cloths police officer or someone with a lot of influence

Miss Liss said...

Ewan, normally I'd agree with you, but from what I've read about Dubai I am inclined to believe this story. Apparently the airport parking lot is full of cars of expats who've had to abandon everything they own there in the quest to get home. Very bad place to do business, the big money offered is just too risky.

zlaurawilson said...

Thanks for sharing. This post really help me a lot and I have learnt some new things from your blog,Nice post! Thank you for sharing this post with us

Regards,
Colorectal surgery specialist

jzacharykennedy said...

Absolutely valuable information that you have written above. I am really impress with your working. Quite helpful and valuable information.Thank you for sharing.

Regards,
Colorectal surgery specialist