Personal Safety and Safeguarding: Why Security Has Become a Public-Interest Issue in the Sam Alatishe Legal CasesLondon, UK — Independent claimant and tech entrepreneur Samsideen Alatishe (known as Sam Alatishe) has today issued a consolidated public statement linking a series of ongoing legal actions with escalating concerns for his personal safety and security.
Over recent months, Mr Alatishe has published multiple press releases detailing legal disputes involving public bodies and government contractors. These include matters relating to housing conditions, medical negligence, welfare benefits, and alleged institutional misconduct. Taken together, he argues, these cases reveal not isolated failures but a prolonged pattern of vulnerability, marginalisation, and safeguarding breakdowns.
________________________________________
A Pattern, Not Isolated Incidents
Mr Alatishe is a British citizen, long-term disabled, and an unemployed tech entrepreneur educated to postgraduate level in enterprise and management. For more than a decade, he has pursued lawful complaints and litigation concerning his treatment by public authorities.
Across different addresses and over extended periods, he reports experiencing a coincidental and recurring pattern of:
• Persistent neighbour harassment and intimidation;
• Verbal abuse and threats of violence;
• Banging on adjoining walls and his front door;
• Interference with his quiet enjoyment of his home; and
• Repeated safeguarding failures despite known vulnerability.
At a previous address, his experience was even more serious and included reported incidents of physical assault and arson, which he states required repeated police involvement.
Mr Alatishe contends that these harms occurred in the context of prolonged interactions with multiple public bodies, including his landlord, the London Borough of Barking and Dagenham, the Department for Work and Pensions / Jobcentre Plus, and affiliated employment and training providers Sencia Limited and Maximus Companies Limited, as well as various National Health Service providers. He argues that systemic failures to intervene allowed risk and harm to persist.
These matters are now the subject of police complaints, housing complaints, and formal legal proceedings.
Call for Scrutiny and Accountability
Mr Alatishe is now calling for:
• Proper safeguarding interventions;
• Independent scrutiny of how vulnerable claimants are treated when they challenge institutions;
• Accountability where physical attacks, harassment, threats, and risk are allowed to persist; and
• Media and civil-society attention to the cumulative impact of these failures.
“This is not just about me,” he says.
“It is about what happens when a vulnerable person refuses to disappear quietly and insists on their rights — and the continuing risk to personal safety (threats to life or limb) when systems fail.”
________________________________________
ENDS
Background:
Previous press releases detailing the individual legal actions are available at:
samalatishe.substack.com/
For further information, evidence, or interview requests:
Email: samsideen.alatishe@gmail.com
X: https://x.com/SamAlatishe
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/samsideen-alatishe