London, UK – 23 January 2026 — Samsideen Alatishe has filed a landmark £3 billion High Court claim against North Street Medical Care, trading as Lawns Medical Care, his National Health Service (NHS) General Practice. The claim, now lodged with the King’s Bench Division, alleges serious medical negligence, harassment, unlawful discrimination, and breaches of human rights, resulting in long-term personal injury, psychological harm, and extensive economic losses.
Mr. Alatishe — a Black African of Nigerian heritage, a graduate in Enterprise and Management for the Creative Arts from the University of the Arts London, and an unemployed tech entrepreneur — lives with long-term health conditions and disability.
His claim not only seeks redress for years of harm and mistreatment, but also highlights wider systemic failures within the UK’s healthcare and public service institutions. The Particulars of Claim cite repeated breaches of the Equality Act 2010 and the Human Rights Act 1998, alongside failures in clinical duty of care.
According to Mr. Alatishe, this case is part of a broader pattern of discriminatory treatment spanning nearly 30 years, involving multiple NHS providers, public agencies, and government bodies. In addition to Lawns Medical Care, ongoing legal action is being taken against:
Mr. Alatishe further reports ongoing difficulty obtaining legal representation, despite the scale and complexity of these claims, and says the prolonged abuse and state failures may now force him to seek asylum in the European Union or elsewhere.
The claim is valued at £3 billion, which Mr. Alatishe says reflects the loss of global business opportunities caused by systemic failures and medical negligence. He argues that, had his entrepreneurial ventures not been disrupted, they could have reached valuations comparable to major global tech companies such as Meta (Facebook), Amazon, and Google (Alphabet).
“This is not simply about personal suffering,” said Mr. Alatishe.
“This is about decades of lost opportunity, discrimination, and a system that failed me. The £3 billion claim is not an exaggeration, but a rational comparison with the companies that were founded around the same time as my projects and are now worth billions or trillions.”
Mr. Alatishe notes that in the early 2000s, he not only developed websites and platforms in areas including online dating and classifieds, but, was one of the first inventors of local search, and social networking — around the time Friendster, the first official social network, launched.
“Social media alone has grown into a multi‑trillion‑dollar industry,” he said.
“If I had not suffered this level of interference, I could have been building the next global tech company — like Zuckerberg with Meta, Bezos with Amazon, or even Elon Musk with Tesla and SpaceX. Like Musk, I had multiple ventures planned. And like him today, I could’ve been on track to becoming one of the first trillionaire’s in history.”
The claim is currently awaiting a hearing date. If successful, it could rank among the largest damages awards in UK legal history. The case raises urgent questions about accountability, equality, and the treatment of vulnerable individuals in healthcare and public services.
For media enquiries, evidence, or interview requests:
Email: samsideen.alatishe@gmail.com
X/Twitter: @SamAlatishe
LinkedIn: Samsideen Alatishe
Tags: #3BillionClaim #HumanRights #NHSNegligence #HealthcareInequality #TechEntrepreneur #Discrimination #EqualityAct #NHSJustice #DisabilityRights #HighCourt #UKLaw #LegalNews #AccessToJustice