Press Release

Supreme Court to rule on power of courts to issue injunctions preventing naming of clinicians involved in end-of-life cases

12 April 2024         Issued by: Christian Concern
Tomorrow (15 April), the highest court in the land will preside over a case to decide what powers courts have to issue injunctions preventing the naming of doctors and hospital staff involved in the care of children subject to tragic end-of-life proceedings.

Supreme Court judges, Lord Reed, Lord Hodge, Lord Briggs, Lord Sales, Lord Stephens, will uphold or overturn a ground-breaking Court of Appeal judgment, which ended life-long anonymity protection for doctors in medical cases including in hugely controversial end-of-life cases.

The case will be heard from 11.00am on Monday 15 April to Tuesday 16 April. As well as the Abbasis and the Haastrups who are bringing the case, parents of Archie BattersbeeIndi Gregory and Sudiksha Thirumalesh will also be in attendance and available for interview.

The outcome of the case will have widespread implications for the press reporting of all legal proceedings which could have profoundly negative consequences for free speech and for press freedoms generally.

Supported by the Christian Legal Centre, and with an intervention from the Free Speech Union, the conjoined case has been brought by two families involved in tragic and high-profile end-of-life cases.

Parents Rashid and Aliya Abbasi and Lanre Haastrup were the subject of ‘best interests’ proceedings brought by hospital trusts who wished to withdraw, against their wishes, life-sustaining treatment from their children.

The Abbasis have described the ‘toxic environment’ surrounding the medical care of their daughter, which involved the shocking video arrest of father, Rashid, at his 6-year-old daughter’s bedside in intensive care.

The parents of Isaiah Haastrup, who suffered severe brain injuries as a result of negligence, faced a similar battle to prevent treatment being withdrawn from their one-year-old son.

In both cases, Newcastle Upon Tyne Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, obtained extremely broad, world-wide reporting restrictions.

These restrictions have prevented the press from exploring the serious concerns that both sets of parents raised about the processes surrounding the treatment of their children.

The gagging orders have prevented both sets of parents from telling the full stories of what happened to them.

Reporting restrictions in such cases usually cease when the child’s life ends. However, in these two cases the High Court ruled that they should continue indefinitely.

The contested issues in such cases involves a balancing exercise between the competing article 8 rights (which concern the right to privacy) of the hospital staff and the article 10 rights (which concern the right to freedom of expression) of the parents involved.

High Court ruled against parents

In June 2021, when the families originally brought the case challenging the restrictions, the President of the Family Division, Sir Andrew McFarlane, held that identities of all clinicians involved should remain secret forever.

The rationale put forward was to keep secret the identity of clinicians involved in case of any public backlash.

This ruling represented a change of the law compared to the system established by his predecessor Sir James Munby, who repeatedly stressed the importance of open justice in family courts, and in particular, that only individuals (but not classes of people) can be anonymised if there are special reasons for doing so.

The families won the right to appeal this ruling in May 2022 with lawyers for the parents arguing that the High Court had erred in law, that restrictions are no longer justified and their continuation breaches the families right to freedom of expression under Article 10 of the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR).

Court of Appeal win and Supreme Court

In a ground-breaking judgment, the Court of Appeal overturned the High Court judgment, ruling that the imperatives of open justice demand that people involved in legal proceedings be publicly identified and that people caught up in disputes with the State be allowed to tell their story. The ruling said:

“The intense focus on the specific rights being claimed delivers the clear conclusion that the article 10 rights of the parents in wishing to “tell their story” outweigh such article 8 rights of clinicians and staff as may still be in play.”

The Court rejected that notion that the Human Rights Act obliged the grant of anonymity in these cases:

“We are aware of no Strasbourg case which has come close to allowing concerns about morale, recruitment or general well-being of health staff to provide a justification for curtailing the right to free expression about individual experiences whilst being cared for, or on matters of general public interest.”

In future, under this ruling such injunctions would only be permitted where there are the most compelling of grounds.

However, this order was stayed pending both NHS Trust’s immediately appealing to the Supreme Court, which was subsequently granted.

Now, intervening in the case, the Free Speech Union has provided written submissions for the Supreme Court which supports the families’ position.

‘We have suffered so much’

Ahead of the hearing, Dr Rashid Abbasi and Dr Aliya Abbasi, whose daughter, Zainab died after proceedings were initiated in 2019 to remove life-sustaining treatment, said:

“Our family has suffered so much due to the actions of the hospital. As doctors ourselves we were aware of the medical gaslighting and the appalling mistreatment our daughter was subjected to but we were rendered powerless to take effective action by the injunctions the hospital obtained which served only to protect a toxic culture which puts doctors’ interests before those of their patients. The transparency which the Court of Appeal has endorsed will ensure proper accountability within the medical profession and help restore ethical standards and public trust in the NHS.”

Mr Haastrup, whose infant son Isaiah suffered severe brain injuries as a result of negligence by King’s College Hospital and who died in 2018 after lengthy court proceedings initiated by the same hospital to remove his life-sustaining treatment, said:

“We were very encouraged by the Court of Appeal ruling and had hoped that we would finally be able to receive justice for Isaiah, and to be able to tell his story. Through this case we have always wanted to shine the light of truth on what happened to Isaiah to seek justice for him and ensure that in future other families will not have to suffer what we went through as his parents.”

Andrea Williams, chief executive of Christian Legal Centre, said: The Court of Appeal ruling set proper limits to the secrecy of family courts proceedings. Withdrawal of life support from a child is the gravest decision which the doctors and judges can ever make. Transparency is essential to ensure proper scrutiny of those decisions by the public and especially by the medical profession.

“We know from experience that even in cases of profound disagreements between families and doctors, most families have a lot of praise for health professionals who had done their best for their child. There may sometimes be criticisms of particular actions by particular doctors. The best way to get to the truth of the matter is through open courts  . Professionals who have done nothing wrong have nothing to fear from transparency.”

“It is now crucial for the Supreme Court to uphold the Court of Appeal’s ruling.”

 

Notes to editors:

Hearing details

When:  11.00am, Monday 15 April – Tuesday 16 April

Where: Supreme Court, Parliament Sq, London SW1P 3BD

Access: in-person and proceedings can also be streamed online at https://www.supremecourt.uk/live/court-01.html .

Photo opportunity/Supporting families: As well as the Abbasi and the Haastrup families who are bringing the case, parents of Archie BattersbeeIndi Gregory and Sudiksha Thirumalesh will also be in attendance and available for interview.

Interviews: for interviews with the families involved or members of their legal team, please contact tom.allen@christianconcern.com / 07974304620

Court of Appeal judgment: https://christianconcern.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/CC-Resource-Judgment-Abassi-Haastrup-CoA-230331.pdf

Police body cam footage of the arrest of Rashid Abbassi at his daughter’s bedside in intensive care https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HXGn5cRbVPI

Interview with Rashid and Aliya Abbasi: https://youtu.be/duCEmjxSrys

Image of Rashid and Aliya Abbasi: 
https://mcusercontent.com/bed173cc9adfcad1e0e442a35/images/e917c9ac-cdb5-4ada-887e-bafd47fc7011.jpg

For more information and interview requests:

Tom Allen: 07974 304 620/ tom.allen@christianconcern.com and Andrea Williams 07712591164

  • Share