Sunday Tribune

Assaulted doctor asks court not to jail assailant

- MERVYN NAIDOO mervyn.naidoo@inl.co.za

A FEMALE medical doctor who was assaulted by a deceased patient’s brother at a Durban hospital in view of patients and staff, has asked the court to be merciful and not to imprison the man for his wrongful actions.

The matter was finalised at the Durban Regional Court this week, and concerned the February 24, 2020, attack on doctor Ayesha Tariq, which left her requiring facial surgery and out of work for nine months.

Zunaid Bux, the 43-year-old accused in the case, at the time blamed Tariq for the death of his sister, Somaya Bibi Sayed.

The incident scarred Tariq emotionall­y and left her hugely embarrasse­d as the assault took place in a profession­al, front-line work environmen­t at the Lenmed Nu-shifa Hospital.

While Tariq was forgiving towards Bux, she wanted him convicted on the grievous bodily harm charge against him, but didn’t want him to receive direct imprisonme­nt as punishment for his wrongdoing.

In extending her gesture of kindness, Tariq said she took into considerat­ion that the attack occurred shortly after her patient Sayed had died at the hospital, and his personal circumstan­ces.

Bux entered into a plea-and-sentencing agreement with the State, led by prosecutor Ronitha Singh, which had also required Tariq’s input as a victim.

He accordingl­y pleaded guilty to the charge, expressed remorse for the wrongfulne­ss of his actions, and also provided Tariq with a written apology.

Magistrate BH Visagie, who handled the matter, confirmed that Bux was sentenced to three years’ imprisonme­nt – wholly suspended for five years – provided he does not commit a similar offence in that period, according to the agreement.

Bux had shared a close bond with Sayed, who had told her brother on the day in question about the “simple procedure” she was going to have at the hospital. She said she would be discharged the following day.

Tariq, a specialist obstetrici­an and gynaecolog­ist, was the medical practition­er who performed the procedure.

Later that day, Bux was called by his brother-in-law to come to the hospital as “something had happened to his sister”, but he hadn’t given more details.

When he got there he realised “something serious” had happened with his sister, and soon figured out that she had died.

He became frantic and emotional when his brother-in-law confirmed that Sayed was dead.

Bux went to the second-floor ward Sayed was in, and saw her body fully covered with a sheet.

Overwhelme­d with emotion, Bux repeatedly shouted for the doctor, and did so until two females approached him.

When Tariq indicated she was the doctor, Bux asked: “Why did you kill my sister?”

Before he could receive a response, he moved towards the doctor and punched her in her face. The force of the blow felled Tariq.

Bux was then restrained and removed from the hospital.

In his plea statement, Bux agreed that his actions were wrongful and he was responsibl­e for the injuries Tariq had sustained, which required medical attention.

About his personal circumstan­ces, Bux said he had two failed marriages and was the father of two sons with his first wife.

He earned a meagre salary from transporti­ng schoolchil­dren, was a volunteer at his local mosque and a for a community-based organisati­on.

Previously he had suffered three heart attacks and had a quadruple heart-bypass procedure in 2018.

He takes chronic medication for various health conditions and was receiving profession­al treatment for depression and anxiety, which came about after his second wife walked out of their relationsh­ip.

Bux stated that his father’s death in 2020 also weighed heavily on him and he served as a caregiver to his sickly mother.

He said assaulting a woman went against the principles of his upbringing, and his subsequent arrest and prosecutio­n was a “harsh and severe” lesson learnt.

Singh stressed that Bux’s offences were a violation of Tariq’s physical and psychologi­cal integrity, and that as a doctor who worked in a profession­al environmen­t, the incident caused her to become fearful of her workplace.

It impacted her profession­al profile and, during her nine months of recovery, Tariq was unable to attend to her patients and lost income.

Singh said profession­als like Tariq faced a particular risk because they worked on the front line and bore the brunt of unhappy patients, family and members of the public. Therefore, they need to be protected.

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