In a definitive ruling delivered on 24 April 2026, the Medical Practitioners Tribunal has permanently erased Dr Mohsen Ali from the medical register, concluding a saga of professional betrayal that extended far beyond the walls of his “squalid” Leicester council house.
While the primary details of his unregulated treatments have surfaced, Daily Dazzling Dawn can now report that Ali has reportedly fled the United Kingdom. During the final proceedings, it was disclosed that the former GP—who qualified from Cairo University in 1994—disengaged from the General Medical Council (GMC) investigation at an early stage and failed to return to face the tribunal after Leicestershire Police launched a criminal inquiry into his operations in 2019.
The depths of the deception involved two primary victims, known as Patients A and B. Patient A, a man battling stage three prostate cancer, was explicitly told his condition was "easy to cure." Documents reveal that Ali went as far as mocking the patient’s fears, laughing over the phone and promising a full refund if the £15,000 treatment failed. This "treatment" consisted of injecting substances like garlic oil and Vitamin C via a cannula in a room described by experts as "neglected and highly inappropriate," featuring an old, decaying mattress in the garden and no sterile facilities.
Perhaps most harrowing is the case of Patient B, a woman with terminal ovarian cancer. Seeking more time with her children after being told by the NHS that no further options remained, she was charged between £10,000 and £12,000. Ali reportedly exploited her vulnerability by claiming the NHS was "killing" patients for profit. She was administered a cocktail of oxygenated water, sodium bicarbonate, and ozone therapy through a peripherally inserted central catheter (PICC line). She passed away shortly after the sessions ended in 2018.
"It was impossible to know exactly what was being administered," a legal representative told a journalist at the hearing, noting that police discovered treatment liquids stored haphazardly in a Halfords box.
The tribunal's decision to strike him off follows a history of non-compliance; Ali had his licence to practise withdrawn as early as 2015 for failing to meet revalidation requirements, yet he continued to represent himself as a GP. He later attempted to frame his actions as "faith healing" and "naturopathic work" to circumvent regulation, even alleging that his patients were blackmailing him.
With Ali’s current whereabouts suspected to be outside British jurisdiction, the tribunal noted that his actions represented a "fundamental breach of the tenets of the profession." The immediate erasure serves as a final barrier against any potential return to the UK medical field, marking the end of a career that traded medical ethics for predatory exploitation.
Expert Guide: Guidance for Patients
If you or a loved one are considering private medical treatment, always verify the practitioner's current status on the GMC's List of Registered Medical Practitioners (LRMP) to ensure they hold an active licence to practise.