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A high-profile attempt by Dr Elroy Weledji to re-enter the UK’s medical profession has ended in failure after a critical skills assessment found his surgical abilities to be unsafe, despite his insistence that noisy football fans and hunger disrupted his performance.
Dr Weledji, originally from Cameroon and a graduate of University College Dublin in 1992, had built his early career in Monmouthshire and Scotland, becoming a fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh in 1996 before a complaint in 1999 triggered a series of professional setbacks.
The General Medical Council (GMC) identified “widespread deficiencies” in his skills by 2001, including issues with legal compliance and patient respect, and a 2004 tribunal suspended his registration indefinitely, citing his failure to address these concerns over several years.
After relocating to Cameroon, Dr Weledji claimed to have revitalized his career, serving as a professor of surgery and gastrointestinal surgeon at a regional hospital, and he attributed his earlier troubles in the UK to racial discrimination and a personal vendetta by an NHS consultant.
In 2023, he sought to lift his suspension, telling the GMC he wanted to return to the UK for the remainder of his working life and alleging that his downfall had been orchestrated by a consultant after he was reprimanded for seeking help during a difficult operation.
He also argued that his complaints about the consultant’s conduct led to his being forced to take a proficiency exam, a claim that highlights ongoing debates about discrimination and whistleblower protection within the NHS.
The GMC permitted Dr Weledji to undergo a three-day assessment in Wigan, which included surgeries on frozen cadavers and simulated patient interactions, but assessors found “serious and persistent mistakes” and concluded that his open surgical skills were unsafe, stating that patients would have been put in “jeopardy” in real scenarios.
Dr Weledji responded by blaming “football fans making noise” outside the venue and his own hunger for his poor performance, though he admitted not raising these issues at the time and assessors noted he had been provided with lunch and regular breaks.
Tribunal chairwoman Ruona Iguyovwe remarked, “[The assessors] disagreed with Dr Weledji’s view that the use of cadavers would make it difficult to demonstrate appropriate skills,” and the panel determined that his fitness to practise remained impaired due to “deficient professional performance,” with a final decision on sanctions pending.
This case comes amid ongoing scrutiny of revalidation processes in the UK, with research from the General Medical Council showing that only a small fraction of doctors who have been suspended or erased are ever restored to the register, underscoring the rigorous standards and patient safety priorities that define the UK’s approach to medical regulation.
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