A Nigerian doctor, Emmanuel Kanu
(pictured above) who touched the breast of a vulnerable divorcee in her
home days after she'd attempted
suicide will be keeping his job after citing cultural differences.
Report from UK Daily Mail
Dr Emmanuel Kanu stroked her breast, repeatedly tried to kiss her and told her, 'You want it' when she tried to escape his clutches during the visit - which he hid from colleagues. When she later texted him to tell him to stop ringing her he withheld his number on the next call.
But Kanu, a married Nigerian father of one, has been allowed to keep his job by a fitness to practise panel even though the General Medical council called for him to be struck off.
He
told the panel he had not molested the patient and claimed 'cultural
differences' led to the visit on September 3, 2011, saying: 'There is a
clear divide between the doctor and the patient here, which is very
different in Nigeria.'
But
the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service only suspended the
36-year-old for six months, despite finding he was guilty of sexually
motivated serious misconduct.
Campaigners
against violence towards women criticised the 'incredibly lenient
penalty'. Nicole Westmarland, former chairman of Rape Crisis and
Professor of Criminology at Durham University, asked 'what it takes for a
doctor to be struck off'.
She said: 'This doctor has committed a number of sexual offences on a woman who was in a very vulnerable position.
'A
six-month suspension is an incredibly lenient penalty and the question
remains: what will happen within the six months that will supposedly
change his behaviour when he returns to work?'
The
doctor, who had recently completed GP training and was undergoing
specialist training in psychiatry, was on a locum shift at the A&E
department of Darlington Memorial Hospital, County Durham, when the
divorcee was brought in after taking a 'substantial overdose'.
She was
still recovering in an emergency ward bed when he asked for her mobile
number and then rang her when she was discharged five days later to say
he was 'thinking of her'.
He
arranged to meet the mother-of-two, who cannot be named for legal
reasons, at her home in Darlington for what the woman believed was a
medical assessment.
But he asked to use her laptop and then viewed Facebook photos of her as he sat next to her on a sofa.
A
report into his actions stated that he put his arm around her and
stroked her chest. It added: 'She informed the panel she was "scared,
frozen to the spot" and said "I was unsure, he was a doctor".
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