British midwife referred to counterterror program over Palestine advocacy

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This article by Ana Vračar republished form peoples dispatch under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC BY-SA) license.

Palestine solidarity rally in London. (Photo: Palestine Solidarity Campaign UK)

Midwife Fatimah Mohamied is suing an NHS Trust after being referred to counterterror program Prevent for Palestine solidarity social media post

Fatimah Mohamied, a Muslim midwife and mother of two, experienced harassment by her former employer over Palestine advocacy. After leaving her position at Chelsea and Westminster NHS Foundation Trust, she was referred both to the Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) and to the counterterrorism program Prevent – a shocking example of how ordinary people are punished for speaking out against war crimes.

As a Cultural Safety Lead Midwife, Mohamied told People’s Health Dispatch that her role was technically meant to address systemic racism and its consequences in maternity services. In a job advert published in January 2024, the Trust described the post as working toward improved outcomes in the local maternity population and better experiences for marginalized staff. “We are looking for someone who is… not afraid of change,” the advert read.

Mohamied’s experience, however, was the very opposite. After the start of the genocide in Gaza, she felt compelled to speak out and advocate for Palestinians under assault and starvation by the Israeli occupation. “Advocacy, after all, is a prominent part of our role – to speak up for the vulnerable, marginalized and dispossessed,” she previously wrote. “These are NHS values and should invariably include opposing illegal occupation, apartheid and ethnic cleansing, as they are severe manifestations of racism.”

Yet she soon discovered that this was not the kind of anti-racism work the Trust had in mind. In response to complaints about her personal social media activity, including from the Zionist group UK Lawyers for Israel, her former employer attempted to silence her. “Every attempt I made to bring the question of Gaza or Palestine into my work was impeded and obstructed,” she explains. The Trust argued that her responsibilities were limited to addressing racism inside the institution rather than globally. “But how could I tackle racism if I didn’t speak out against one of the worst manifestations of racism in contemporary history?” Mohamied asks.

Referred to Prevent

After she left the position in March 2024, Mohamied was referred to the NMC, which soon concluded that the complaints were unfounded. Then, in May 2025, a Prevent police officer contacted her, notifying her that the Trust had also referred her to the program.

Part of Britain’s so-called counterterrorism strategy, Prevent has long been shown to disproportionately target Muslim communities, with health services coopted into cooperation. In this context, Mohamied’s referral underscores both the criminalization of solidarity with Palestine as much as it does the systemic racism and Islamophobia in Britain.

Read more: Prevent: Health workers resist UK’s ‘counter terrorism’ strategy that weaponizes public services

Reading the officer’s email, Mohamied describes being terrified, knowing how others had been treated under the program. As a health worker, she had also undergone Prevent-related training, which offered her little reassurance. “Prevent training is built so people will rely on their conscious and unconscious biases,” she says. This, she adds, feeds into the dominant white supremacist framework that society is forced to operate within.

“If you’re Muslim, regardless of whether you are a health worker or something else, you’ll be discriminated against. If you stick out, you’ll be perceived as someone with extreme ideas, and you won’t get the benefit of a doubt as other people will,” Mohamied adds. In this case, the Prevent officer – like the NMC – concluded there was no basis for the referral, even noting it was unusual for an organization the size of an NHS Foundation Trust to make such a claim.

A lesson for all the NHS

The targeting Mohamied faced illustrates a dangerous trend in Britain, where advocacy for Palestine is increasingly censored and criminalized. “I think I’m one in a long line of people who have been harassed for speaking up for Palestine,” she says. In recent months alone, dozens have been arrested for participating in peaceful protests after the proscription of direct action group Palestine Action. Journalists covering Palestine have also been targeted, with homes raided and devices seized.

Mohamied is now taking legal action against the Trust over post-employment harassment and discrimination, urging others to support her case. “I hope my case sends a strong message to the Trust, but also to all the NHS of how they should not be behaving – how they need to apply caution when they’re approached by extreme lobby groups,” she says.

As Israel’s genocide in Gaza continues, Mohamied stresses that justice cannot be separated from speaking out about the atrocities being committed there: “It is naive to believe that Israel’s attacks on healthcare in Palestine won’t impact health elsewhere.”

“It’s time for the NHS to actually stick by its values,” she concludes, invoking the service’s professed dedication to justice and equity.

People’s Health Dispatch is a fortnightly bulletin published by the People’s Health Movement and Peoples Dispatch. For more articles and to subscribe to People’s Health Dispatch, click here.

This article by Ana Vračar republished form peoples dispatch under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC BY-SA) license.

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Zarah Sultana speaks on main stage at Forwards Festival

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https://www.bristol247.com/news-and-features/news/zarah-sultana-speaks-on-main-stage-at-forwards-festival

Photo: Khali Ackford

Zarah Sultana made a surprise appearance on the main stage at Forwards, delivering a passionate speech to the crowd before introducing Nia Archives.

The MP for Coventry South resigned from the Labour Party in July in order to co-found a new grassroots party with fellow independent MPs including former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn.

Earlier on Sunday, Sultana had taken part in a panel discussion called The Movement Forward: Pissed off with Politics on the Information Stage at the festival on the Downs.

On the main stage, Sultana said: “A lot of people are fed up. I am too. Fed up with being told that this is just how things are. Fed up with being asked to settle for less. Fed up with the idea that the best we can do is manage decline, implement austerity, blame migrants, Muslims and trans people, enable genocide in Gaza, and have fascism growling at the door.

“But here’s the truth: politics is not only what happens in parliament or on the news. Politics is us. It’s here. It’s all of you.

“It’s people deciding they won’t accept the world as it is. It’s people daring to imagine the world as it should be.

“Every great change we’ve ever seen, from rights at work, to votes for women, to the NHS didn’t come from the top down.

“It came because ordinary people stood up and said: we aren’t going to take this anymore.

“And when people come together with that conviction, something powerful happens: hope.

“Not the shallow kind that tells us to just wait and see, but the deep kind that comes when we believe we can build something new, and we start doing it.”

Article continues at https://www.bristol247.com/news-and-features/news/zarah-sultana-speaks-on-main-stage-at-forwards-festival

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Resident doctors’ 29% pay claim is non-negotiable, BMA chair says

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https://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/jul/11/resident-doctors-29-pay-claim-is-non-negotiable-bma-chair-says

NHS emblem
NHS logo. Resident doctors in England will strike later this month after being offered a 5.4% pay rise, which the government say will not be revisited.

Resident doctors’ 29% pay claim is non-negotiable, reasonable and easily affordable for the NHS, the new leader of the medical profession has said.

Strikes to ensure resident – formerly junior – doctors in England get the full 29% could drag on for years, according to Dr Tom Dolphin, the British Medical Association’s new council chair.

The doctors’ union will not negotiate on or accept a lower figure because that is the extent of the real-terms loss of earnings resident doctors have suffered since 2008, which they want restored – in full – Dolphin told the Guardian in his first interview since taking over last month.

The 29% demand is not up for negotiation “because it’s based on a principle”, said Dolphin, a consultant anaesthetist. “If we picked a different number, that wouldn’t achieve the pay restoration. So that’s why it looks inflexible.”

Dolphin blamed the five-day strike that tens of thousands of resident doctors plan to stage later this month on Wes Streeting, the health secretary, giving them a 22% pay rise over two years last year but not following it up with an award this year to take account of the 29% claim. He said the disruption that the 120-hour walkout would cause was his fault, not theirs.

Article continues at https://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/jul/11/resident-doctors-29-pay-claim-is-non-negotiable-bma-chair-says

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Resident doctors vote for strikes that could hit the NHS for six months

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https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/resident-doctors-vote-strikes-could-hit-nhs-six-months

 Junior doctors and members of the British Medical Association (BMA) outside Queen’s Medical Centre, Nottingham, January 3, 2024

THE NHS could face six months of disruption after resident doctors in England voted in favour of strike action today.

Downing Street said that pay negotiations would not be reopened because the government “can’t be more generous” than it has been already this year.

Some 90 per cent of voting resident doctors in England, formerly known as junior doctors, said they would down stethoscopes and take to picket lines amid an ongoing row over pay.

The British Medical Association (BMA) said that there had been a turnout of 55 per cent and that resident doctors needed an increase of 29.2 per cent to reverse “pay erosion” since 2008-09.

The union added that there was “still time to avert strike action” and urged the government to “come forward as soon as possible with a credible path to pay restoration.”

Article continues at https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/resident-doctors-vote-strikes-could-hit-nhs-six-months

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Starmer faces mass opposition against nuclear arms escalation

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https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/starmer-faces-mass-opposition-against-nuclear-arms-escalation

 F35 fighters on the flight deck of HMS Prince of Wales, the Royal Navy’s flagship aircraft carrier, in Plymouth, Devon

SIR KEIR STARMER’S militarism faces mass opposition after he announced today that the government is to buy 12 new fighter jets capable of delivering nuclear weapons.

The Prime Minister used the Nato summit in The Hague to break the news, which campaigners called a breach of Britain’s obligations under the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

The new aeroplanes and nuclear weapons will be US-built but flown by RAF crews, based at RAF facilities in East Anglia and assigned to the Nato nuclear mission.

Under the plan, Britain will buy 12 F-35A jets, which are capable of carrying conventional munitions and also the B61-12 gravity bomb, which is three times more powerful than the weapon dropped on Hiroshima in 1945.

In the Commons, independent MP Jeremy Corbyn demanded that ministers explain how the decision complied with treaties “which require nuclear weapons states not to allow proliferation and take steps towards nuclear disarmament.”

The Stop the War Coalition asked: “On what planet does buying F-35s for around £80 million each from the US company Lockheed Martin equal job creation at home while cutting welfare?”

Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament general secretary Sophie Bolt called the planned purchase a “disastrous decision by the Starmer government that makes the world more dangerous and puts the British population on the nuclear front line.” 

She pledged mass action against the deployments.

“The millions that will be spent on these jets, and the millions more that would be needed to upgrade RAF Marham, will be coming out of further cuts to public services, to our NHS and our social care system,” Ms Bolt said.

https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/starmer-faces-mass-opposition-against-nuclear-arms-escalation

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