Politics
Pakistani doctor who abandoned patient mid-surgery ‘at low risk of repeating misconduct’

LONDON: A Pakistani-origin doctor who left a patient midway through an operation to have intercourse with a nurse is at “very low risk” of repeating his serious misconduct, a medical tribunal has ruled.
Married father-of-three, 44, and the unnamed nurse were caught in a “compromising position” by a shocked colleague who walked in on the pair at Tameside Hospital.
The consultant anaesthetist from Lahore had asked another nursing colleague to monitor the male patient, who was under general anaesthetic, so he could go to the bathroom.
Instead, the doctor went to another operating theatre – used partly as a storage room – at the hospital in Ashton-under-Lyne, Greater Manchester, where sexual activity took place with Nurse C on September 16, 2023.
The doctor was absent from the operating room for eight minutes and the patient came to no harm. The matter was reported to management and the doctor was dismissed in February 2024 following an internal investigation.
Last week, he told an MPTS disciplinary tribunal he wanted to resume his career in the UK and relocate with his family after they had since moved to his native Pakistan where he worked as a doctor.
The doctor promised there would never be a repeat of a “one-off error of judgment”.
Giving evidence, he said: “It was quite shameful, to say the least. I only have myself to blame. I let down everybody, not just my patient and myself but the trust and how it would look. I let down my colleagues who gave me a lot of respect.”
On Monday, the tribunal determined that the doctor “had put his own interests before those of the patient and his colleagues” and the incident involving Nurse C “had the potential to distract … and he may not have able to give his full attention to the patient’s care”.
Tribunal chairwoman Rebecca Miller said his actions, while they did not harm the patient’s safety, were “significant enough to amount to misconduct that was serious”.
However, she was satisfied that the doctor was determined not to repeat his past misconduct and considered the risk of repetition to be “very low”.
Miller said: “The tribunal considered that members of the public and the profession would understand the high level of scrutiny to which …Dr Anjum had been subjected, and that a finding of serious misconduct would weigh heavily upon him.
The tribunal was satisfied that this public finding of serious misconduct was sufficient to maintain public confidence in the profession and proper professional standards, and that there was not a necessity to make a finding of impaired fitness to practise for that purpose.”
No sanction will be imposed on the doctor and the hearing will reconvene in Manchester on Tuesday to decide whether to issue a warning on the doctor’s registration.
The doctor had admitted engaging in sexual activity with Nurse C and that he knew she was “likely to be nearby” when he left his patient. He also admitted his actions had the potential to put his patient at risk.
Politics
Blaze at Mexico store kills 23, including children

- Governor Durazo orders probe; children among the dead.
- President Sheinbaum sends aid teams, offers condolences.
- Cause of the fire, now doused, still unclear.
MEXICO CITY: A festive holiday weekend turned tragic for families in northwestern Mexico on Saturday when a deadly blaze engulfed a discount store in the city centre of Hermosillo, killing at least 23 people and injuring a dozen.
Mexico is celebrating the Day of the Dead this weekend with colourful festivities in which families honour and remember deceased loved ones.
“I have ordered a thorough and transparent investigation to clarify the causes of the accident,” Alfonso Durazo, governor of the state of Sonora, home to the city, said in a video on social media, adding that children were among the victims.
Most of the deaths appeared to have been from inhalation of toxic gases, said Gustavo Salas, the state’s attorney general, citing its forensic medical service.
“My heartfelt condolences to the families and loved ones of those who lost their lives,” President Claudia Sheinbaum said in a post on X, adding that she had directed support teams to be sent to help victims’ families and the injured.
Sonora’s Red Cross said its 40 staff and 10 ambulances joined in the effort, making six trips to the hospital.
The cause of the fire, now doused, was still unclear, though some media blamed an electrical failure. City officials said the store, part of the popular discount chain Waldo’s, was not the target of an attack.
The chief of the city’s firefighters said it was still being investigated whether there was an explosion.
Politics
India’s Cloud Seeding Trials Criticized as ‘Costly Spectacle’

India’s attempt to tackle New Delhi’s toxic air by using cloud seeding appears to have produced disappointing results, with scientists and activists questioning whether the costly experiment was worth it.
Cloud seeding — a process in which aircraft spray particles such as silver iodide or salt into clouds to induce rainfall is intended to help wash pollutants out of the atmosphere.
Authorities in Delhi, in collaboration with the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Kanpur, began the trials last week using a Cessna aircraft over parts of the capital.
However, officials said the initial tests yielded minimal rainfall due to limited cloud cover.
“This will never do the job it’s an illusion,” said environmental activist Bhavreen Kandhari. “We can only control air pollution by addressing its sources, not by chasing clouds.”
Local media reported that the government has spent around $364,000 on the project so far.
Each winter, a thick blanket of smog envelops Delhi and its 30 million residents, as cold air traps emissions from vehicle exhaust, factory smoke, and crop burning in nearby states.
Despite various government efforts including vehicle restrictions, anti-smog towers, and mist-spraying trucks Delhi consistently ranks among the world’s most polluted capitals.
Following the latest cloud seeding attempt, levels of PM2.5 the fine particles linked to heart and lung disease reached 323 micrograms per cubic meter, over 20 times the World Health Organization’s safe daily limit.
A study published in The Lancet Planetary Health last year estimated that 3.8 million deaths in India between 2009 and 2019 were associated with air pollution exposure.
Questions also remain about the environmental impact of cloud seeding chemicals.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) says limited research suggests silver iodide poses little risk to human health or the environment, but acknowledges that the long-term effects of widespread use remain unclear.
Research process
Environmental activists say even if cloud seeding produces rain, the benefits are short-lived.
Climate scientist Daniele Visioni at Cornell University said it was unclear how efficient it was in heavy polluted conditions.
“It can’t create rain where there is no moisture in the air, but it just ‘forces’ some of the water to condense in one location rather than another,” he told AFP.
“There is only one thing that can sensibly reduce pollution: avoiding the burning of fossil fuels.”
Virendra Sachdeva, from Delhi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), said it was too early to dismiss the cloud seeding experiment as a “scientific failure”.
“It is a part of the research process, and success is not always achieved in the first attempt,” he told reporters.
However, two atmospheric scientists at IIT Delhi called the cloud seeding plan “another gimmick”.
“It is a textbook case of science misapplied and ethics ignored,” Shahzad Gani and Krishna Achutarao wrote in The Hindu newspaper.
Mohan George, from the Delhi-based Centre for Science and Environment, said artificial rain was not the answer.
“The levels of pollution will come back almost immediately as rain stops,” the scientist told AFP.
When it does work, it will increase precipitation in one area — while potentially decreasing it for another.
Costly spectacle
Cloud seeding, first developed in the 1940s, has been used in various countries to induce rain, clear fog, and reduce drought, but with mixed results.
China used it during the 2008 Beijing Olympics in an attempt to control the weather.
Gani and Achutarao said Delhi’s pollution causes — unchecked emissions and seasonal crop burning — are well known.
So too are the solutions cleaner fuel, better waste management and stricter enforcement of rules.
“Instead of reinforcing these priorities, parts of the scientific ecosystem researchers, advisors, and institutions — are lending credibility to a costly spectacle that will do little to address the sources of the crisis,” they said.
Politics
Two arrested after multiple people stabbed on UK train, police say

- Police called after reports of train stabbings.
- Senior officials inform armed cops enter train.
- Eyewitnesses say one suspect tasered by police.
Multiple people were taken to the hospital after a series of stabbings on a train near Cambridge in eastern England on Saturday, and two men have been arrested, in what Prime Minister Keir Starmer called an “appalling incident.”
British police and ambulance services said several people had been stabbed on the train, which stopped at Huntingdon, with armed officers seen entering the train in videos on social media.
Cambridgeshire police said they were called at 1939 GMT after reports that multiple people had been stabbed on a train.
“Armed officers attended and the train was stopped at Huntingdon, where two men were arrested. A number of people have been taken to hospital,” the police said in a statement.
The East of England Ambulance Service said it mobilised a large-scale response to Huntingdon Railway Station, which included numerous ambulances and critical care teams, including three air ambulances.
“We can confirm we have transported multiple patients to hospital,” it said.
One eyewitness told Sky News that one of the suspects, waving a large knife, was tasered by police.
PM Starmer posted on X that the incident was “deeply concerning.”
“My thoughts are with all those affected, and my thanks go to the emergency services for their response,” he said.
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