He was ordered not to publish anything that might jeopardize Colin Blakemore's safety and to give solicitors the names of anyone to whom he might already have given the information. Coleman was later granted a temporary injunction by a High Court judge after saying he would publish a pamphlet with Blakemore's home address and telephone number to encourage the public to 'get in touch with you to discuss your work'. In 1994 Coleman was ordered to pay damages for threatening scientist Colin Blakemore, who had been targeted by anti-vivisection activists after a letter bomb sent by animal rights group calling itself 'The Justice Department' was sent to Blakemore's home, with another exploding and injuring three people. Īn anti-vivisectionist, Coleman provided a supplementary memorandum for the House of Lords on the topic of vivisection in 1993.
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He is no longer registered or licensed to practice as a GP, having relinquished his medical license in March 2016.
In 1981, the Department of Health and Social Security (DHSS) fined him for refusing to write the diagnoses on sick notes, which he considered a breach of patient confidentiality. CareerĬoleman qualified as a doctor in 1970 and worked as a GP. He attended a medical school in Birmingham. He was raised in Walsall, Staffordshire, in the West Midlands of England, where he attended Queen Mary's Grammar School.
The FOLD broadcast their festival online and continue on with their webinar series, giving crucial voices a platform. The Writers' Trust has run online panels and created a fund for writers in need. Those who love books have been doing what they can to keep people connected. "Nonetheless, people are sharing their own work and the work of writers that they admire. Publishing houses are trying to find ways to draw attention to new books and voices and some authors have been left to do what they can to promote their work, while at the mercy of an industry scrambling to adapt. Festivals have had their authors and panellists recreate the experience online, as best they can, and as long as they have enough Internet to make it happen. Books that were to launch this spring and summer have had to be released into the world without in-person readings and tour appearances. "The past few months have been filled with uncertainty and unforeseen challenges for almost everybody, including those who write, publish and sell literature across the country. Kevin Hardcastle the author of the short story collection Debris and the novel In the Cage.