I am taking the General Medical Council to the High Court.
If you are a British barrister and you want to take this on, please get in touch.
The video below was recorded before the second IOT (24–26 November 2025), which suspended my medical licence for 15 months.
Nobody wants to live next to a war criminal... I've just signed my name calling for the government to investigate Brits who have returned from serving in the IDF - you should too! @DeclassifiedUK https://t.co/KUMubbSjL4
The debate around military conscription in the UK is rising.Forcing young people into service deprives them of choices and would be colossal waste of funds during a cost of living crisis. Add your name to tell the government to rule it out! https://t.co/MLrS2rBp7b via @38degrees
One part of the travesty of the Filton 6 actionists’ trial and retrial that has received less attention but is very important: Rajiv Menon, King’s Council, barrister for a member of the Filton 6, is being persecuted on a wholly unprecedented charge of contempt of court, carrying a punishment of up to two years imprisonment, for mentioning legal history and principles of law that allow juries to make independent decisions on conscience that Judge Johnson ruled out.
In the first trial’s closing statement to the jury, Menon pointed out the case that established this principle from 1670 and quoted the public plaque outside the Old Bailey (the central court in London) commemorating the case. He also reminded the jurors six times that the judge could not direct them to convict. The jury exonerated all the defendants in that first trial. Now they have been retried and convicted on some charges.
It sounds like Rajiv Menon is being punished for being extremely good at his job and for explaining the actual law relevant to the rights of the jury that this establishment judge close to the UK police and security services unethically suppressed to secure a political conviction to protect Elbit Systems. It is hard to avoid the conclusion that the Judge Johnson set up the rules and judgments precisely to engineer a conviction to circumvent the propensity of juries to acquit actionists. Then he plans to sentence them under extremely harsh terrorism laws by manipulating unjustly what jurors could know. Rajiv Menon initially disrupted that plan in the first trial. So now the judge and state are going after him.
We must support Rajiv Menon, a fantastic and principled barrister, and the actionists against the UK state’s punitive crackdown on those using democratic rights to protest and stop the Israeli arms industry from facilitating war crimes, illegal occupation and genocide. The corrupt and complicit political establishment in the UK has shown themselves willing to evacuate rights to free speech and assembly, jury trials, press freedom and a host of democratic rights for all citizens simply to protect Israel’s impunity and their own complicity in the genocide.
Support Rajiv Menon for defending pro-Palestine actionists and condemn what the UK courts and injustice system have done to jury trials and democratic rights!
@IraninHyderabad The US is not the only country with its capital outside its borders. Just look at the U.K. He’s not called ‘Tel Aviv’ Keir for nothing!
🚨🇵🇸 Journalists in northern Gaza address the world directly: “The israeli law to hang Palestinians to their death is worse than Nazis.”
If you see this video, please repost for awareness.
BlackRock wants to work with the Greater Manchester Pension Fund (@GMPF_LGPS) to buy up NHS GP surgeries.
Our NHS is not for sale - Cllr Eleanor Wills, leader of @TamesideCouncil (which runs GMPF) must drop this deal NOW.
Sign the petition 👇 https://t.co/F5smckmkpT
Aya paints where others would have stopped seeing.
In Gaza, where walls are cracked and the sky itself feels wounded, she gathers what remains, charcoal from burnt wood, fragments of color, scraps of paper, and turns them into something the world has not managed to destroy: meaning.
She is young, but her eyes carry entire histories.
There is a quiet defiance in her art.
Not loud, not shouted, but persistent.
Each stroke says: we were here.
Each color insists: we are still here.
Where others see rubble, Aya sees lines, shadows, stories demanding to be held.
Sometimes she pauses, brush in hand, listening, to distant echoes, to the weight of absence.
Then she continues.
Because stopping would mean allowing silence to win.
She dreams, still, of a real studio one day. Of clean canvases, of light pouring through wide windows, of painting without urgency, without fear.
But until that day comes, the world itself is her canvas, broken, yes, but not beyond repair.
Aya is not just a painter.
She is memory refusing to fade.
She is color in a place that has been forced into gray.
She is proof that even here, especially here, art survives.
If her story reached you, let it not end here. Please, donate if you can, even the smallest amount can help her and her family meet their most basic needs.
And if you are unable to give, sharing her story matters just as much.
It carries her voice beyond the walls that confine her, beyond the silence that so often surrounds her reality.
🙏♥️
https://t.co/ZZTmiQOQl3
Some inside Iran don't see or believe the level of global support they have for their war against the Epstein Axis. Retweet if you stand with Iran & the Resistance 💛