THE son of an anti-vaxxer nurse at the heart of a police probe after comparing NHS medics to Nazis has slammed his "arrogant" mum.

Sebastian Shemirani, 21, is estranged from his conspiracy theorist mother Kate, 54 – and says she "should be prosecuted".


And after watching his mother give a speech at a rally in London at the weekend, Sebastian said he believes she's risking the lives of others.

He told BBC Radio 4’s Today show: “She should be prosecuted under existing laws.

"Or if there are not laws in place that say what she is doing is illegal, we should be having a national conversation about what laws we should be bringing in and drafting up legislation for that.

"Because it’s only a matter of time before . . . somebody acts on the bad advice that she’s giving the country.”

It comes as:

  • Boris Johnson is braced for further fury over proposed vaccine passports that would be a ‘big ­cultural change’
  • The pingdemic ‘will leave supermarket shelves empty again in just weeks’ unless the staff crisis is solved, it's claimed
  • France could be amber on the UK's travel traffic light system again soon – because the Beta variant 'is less dangerous than initially thought'
  • New Health Secretary Sajid Javid has apologised after saying the public 'shouldn't cower' from Covid
  • Boozy Brits went wild this weekend as clubs opened on a Friday and Saturday for the first time since March 2020

Miss Shemirani, who lost her job as a nurse over her beliefs, believes her son's criticism shows he's part of a CIA-organised "global plot".

The conspiracy will wipe out half of the UK's population within the next five years, she claims.

Police have launched a probe against Miss Shemirani after she said doctors and nurses are like Nazi doctors complicit in genocide – and should face "Nuremberg trials".

She also claimed vaccination teams should be renamed "death squads" and said the NHS should be referred to as the "new Auschwitz".

Boris Johnson is among those to condemn her comments, with his official spokesman telling reporters violence, threats or intimidation to heroes on the frontline is "completely unacceptable".

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Now Sebastian, a banking intern with JP Morgan who graduated from the London School of Economics after attending Eton, has said: "I wouldn’t say that most people who believe these ideas are beyond [help].

“It might take a number of years but you eventually crawl down from the initial radical period and you start listening to people around you more.

"But my mum is definitely beyond help – the problem is because she is so arrogant in her world view and really truly believes that she is a conduit for the truth on a spiritual level, not just a scientific level."

He previously told the BBC his mum is "dangerous" – adding: "She's someone with a massive amount of self-interest and loves being the centre of attention".

But Miss Shemirani defiantly replied: "From what I can see, it would appear a 'conspiracy theorist' is actually now anyone who believes something other than what your controllers want them to believe.

"I find this deeply disturbing."

'NAZI DOCTORS AND NURSES WERE HANGED'

The mum-of-four, a former nurse of 35 years, is adamant coronavirus is a hoax and claimed its symptoms are linked to the roll-out of 5G

She has argued the vaccine is a political tool to gain access to and change people's DNA, has likened lockdown to the Holocaust and insisted dancing NHS nurses will "stand trial for genocide".

In footage posted on Twitter on Saturday, Miss Shemirani spoke to a crowd in Trafalgar Square through a loudhailer, telling them: "At the Nuremberg trials, the doctors and nurses, they stood trial, and they hung.

"If you are a doctor or a nurse, now is the time to get off that bus.

"Get off it and stand with us, the people, all around the world they are rising."

She told the crowd to get the names of NHS workers, adding: "Email them to me. With a group of lawyers, we are collecting all that."

A Met Police spokesman said that the remarks were being investigated.

No arrests have been made.


Conspiracy theorist compared NHS heroes to Nazis

Nazi doctors were among those to go on trial for war crimes in Nuremberg at the end of the WWII.

In total, 20 of the 23 defendants were medical doctors said to have been involved in sick human experimentation and mass murder.

The indictment was filed on 25 October 1946, and a trial began on December 9, finally ending on August 20 the following year.

Of the 23 defendants, seven were acquitted and seven received death sentences.

The remainder received prison sentences ranging from 10 years to life imprisonment.

All of the criminals sentenced to death were hanged on June 2 1948 in Landsberg prison, Bavaria. 

Josef Mengele, one of the leading Nazi doctors, had evaded capture. 

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