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‘Rogue’ surgeon with more than 200 victims to face public inquiry

2025-11-26 12:40
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‘Rogue’ surgeon with more than 200 victims to face public inquiry

Sam Eljamel is understood to have more than 200 victims

‘Rogue’ surgeon with more than 200 victims to face public inquiry William Hallowell William Hallowell Published November 26, 2025 12:40pm Updated November 26, 2025 12:40pm Share this article via whatsappShare this article via xCopy the link to this article.Link is copiedShare this article via facebook Comment now Comments Sam Eljamel was the head of the neurosurgery department in Ninewells Hospital in Dundee. A full independent public inquiry is to be held into disgraced surgeon Sam Eljamel, the Scottish Government has revealed. Professor Eljamel is accused of harming hundreds of patients while working at NHS Tayside, leaving some with life-changing injuries through botched surgeries. Sam Eljamel is understood to have more than 200 victims (Picture: Daily Record)

A surgeon who removed a woman’s tear duct instead of a brain tumour is to face a public inquiry.

Hundreds of people have come forward, including Jules Rose who has led a campaign by patients alleged to have been harmed by Sam Eljamel.

Ms Rose, a mother-of-two, previously accused NHS Tayside of ‘reaching the threshold of criminality’ while Eljamel was ‘armed with a scalpel’.

Eljamel was head of neurosurgery at NHS Tayside’s Ninewells Hospital in Dundee from 1995 until his suspension in December 2013.

Over this 18-year period he is alleged to have botched hundreds of operations, leaving some patients with life-changing injuries.

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Following his suspension, Eljamel resigned in May 2014 and removed himself from the General Medical Register the following year.

Now the disgraced surgeon’s victims will give evidence against him.

The inquiry into Eljamel’s professional practice was announced by the Scottish Government in September 2023 and its terms of reference were set out by Scottish Health Secretary Neil Gray earlier this year.

Campaigners take part in a demonstration outside the Scottish Parliament at Holyrood, Edinburgh, where patients affected by neurosurgeon Professor Sam Eljamel are calling on the Scottish Government for a public inquiry and individual clinical reviews of their treatment to get underway. Campaigners outside the Scottish Parliament in February 2024 calling for a public inquiry to investigate Eljamel (Picture: Andrew Milligan/PA Wire)

Its remit includes how concerns about Eljamel were responded to by his employer, NHS Tayside, and whether the systems in place to protect patients were adequate.

Jamie Dawson KC, senior counsel to the inquiry, and Joanna Cherry KC, for the patient group, will make opening statements at a hearing in Edinburgh on Wednesday, as will Una Doherty KC for NHS Tayside and Laura Thomson KC for Scottish ministers.

On Thursday, the inquiry will hear statements on behalf of Healthcare Improvement Scotland, NHS Education for Scotland and the Royal College of Surgeons (Edinburgh).

The inquiry will also hear a submission on behalf of the Independent Clinical Review (ICR), which is not a core participant.

Campaigners take part in a demonstration outside the Scottish Parliament at Holyrood, Edinburgh, as patients affected by neurosurgeon Professor Sam Eljamel are calling on the Scottish Government for a public inquiry and individual clinical reviews of their treatment to get underway. The father of one of Eljamel’s victims said his son has suffered physically and mentally following an operation by the disgraced surgeon (Picture: Andrew Milligan/PA Wire)

It will look at areas including the broad trajectory of Eljamel’s career in Scotland, the types of work he undertook and the systems surrounding his NHS practice.

It will also examine the circumstances surrounding his appointment to the role of consultant neurosurgeon at Ninewells Hospital in Dundee in 1995, and other key roles and the complaints and feedback systems in place at NHS Tayside.

Speaking to reporters outside Tayside Police Station in Dundee in November 2023, when Eljamel was understood to be working as a surgeon in Libya, Ms Rose said she believed the health board failed Eljamel’s patients.

‘NHS Tayside, we feel, armed Eljamel with a scalpel and allowed him to do business and to cause harm,’ she said.

Jules Rose outside Police Scotland Bell Street station in Dundee, where she lodged a report with Police Scotland accusing NHS Tayside of criminality in its failed oversight of rogue neurosurgeon Professor Sam Eljamel. Jules Rose outside a Dundee police station where she lodged a report accusing NHS Tayside of criminality (Picture: PA)

She also previously said: ‘I currently have 133 patient names who have approached me who have been severely harmed.

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‘Of these 111 new patients, I only know five. So potentially, now, we’re looking at 239 patients that have been severely harmed under NHS Tayside and Professor Eljamel. Literally, this number has increased overnight.’

In September this year NHS Tayside apologised for the way in which it handled patients’ concerns over Eljamel.

Dr James Cotton, executive medical director of NHS Tayside, said: ‘We know that many people have experienced considerable distress as patients of Mr Eljamel and we understand that in many cases we have added to that trauma in the way that we have handled ongoing complaints and concerns.’

He said the board is ‘sincerely sorry for this’, adding that it is ‘fully committed to making improvements where failings have been identified’.

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