NHS doctor charged with inviting support for Hamas

Dr Aladwan marked the two-year anniversary of the attack with a series of posts on social media glorifying October 7 as “the day ‘Israel’ was humiliated”.
She added: “Their supremacy shattered at the hands of the children they forced out of their homes. The children who watched foreign Jews execute their loved ones, rape their land, and live on their stolen soil.” She said “glory to the breaking of the 17 year long illegal siege” complete with a photo of a bulldozer ploughing through a fence.
Earlier this year, the trainee surgeon was banned from practising medicine for 15 months by a Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service (MPTS) panel, pending the outcome of a full investigation by the General Medical Council (GMC).
Emma Gilsenan, legal counsel for the GMC, had called for Dr Aladwan to be suspended because of posts on X that talked of “Jewish supremacy”; called Israelis “worse than Nazis”, and described Hamas militants as “oppressed resistance fighters, not terrorists”.
The MPTS panel concluded that a lengthy ban was needed “after balancing the risk to the protection of the public, the public interest and the interests of the doctor”.
Dr Aladwan has described anti-Semitism and the Holocaust as “concepts” used by Jewish people to “promote a narrative of victimhood”, placing a trademark symbol to the right of the word Holocaust.
On July 30, she claimed that the Royal Free Hospital in north London, which serves a large Jewish community, was a “Jewish supremacy cesspit”. She has also said she would “never condemn the 7th of October” and repeatedly claimed the number of “proven rapes on Oct 7 is zero”.
Hamas killed about 1,200 Israelis and abducted 251 hostages on Oct 7 2023. A United Nations report found that Hamas attackers raped women at the Nova music festival site, used “sexualised torture” against hostages and raped women’s corpses.



