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ITV News anchor Rageh Omaar 'wasn't terribly well' night before he was rushed to hospital after struggling  to speak while presenting the 10 o'clock news - raising questions over ITV's duty of care and why he was allowed back on air

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ITV is facing fresh scrutiny over its duty of care to news anchor Rageh Omaar after it was suggested he already appeared ill the night before he struggled to speak during a bulletin broadcast.

Viewers were left concerned for the 10 o'clock news presenter as he suffered evident difficulties towards the end of the programme on Friday - and now a channel veteran has said there were warning signs beforehand.

Nicholas Owen, a former ITV News presenter, sent a message of sympathy to Mr Omaar, 56, who has himself thanked the public for their support.

The Mail On Sunday revealed that ITV news bosses did try to get Mr Omaar to hand over his bulletin to a stand-in anchor after he became unwell live on air.

But there are new questions over whether more should have been done to protect him.

ITV News presenter Rageh Omaar was seen struggling to speak on last Friday's News At Ten

Veteran presenter Nicholas Owen, who worked for ITV for decades, has today suggested Mr Omaar had been unwell the previous night

Mr Owen, speaking on GB News today, said: 'Of course I can identify with what happened - I know Rageh very well and he is a very distinguished correspondent and great presenter.

'You just want to finish the job if you sit in that chair where millions of people and more are watching you and listening to you.

'I can remember going in the studio once or twice thinking, "Well, I don't feel particularly 100 per cent today" but usually Dr Studio, if that's the right term, kicks in - Dr Studio takes over and you get through.'

Mr Owen added: 'Apparently he wasn't terribly well the previous night - so perhaps my dear colleagues, and I worked at ITV for many years very, very happily, perhaps they might have stepped in and just insisted he step back?

“I don't really know, maybe they did - it’s just very hard, especially if he's done all of the preparation with all of the scripts. We just wish him well, that's the most important thing.'

Mr Omaar has reportedly insisted that he continued and refused to hand over to a replacement host from the London regional news even though after the show he was taken straight to hospital.

An ITV News source told The Mail on Sunday: 'The programme team were trying to replace him when they realised there was a problem.

'They sent the standby presenter to the set to take over but he insisted on remaining on air. No one could get him out of his chair.

Nicholas Owen (left) told GB News presenter Camilla Tominey (right) that he understood why Rageh Omaar might have wanted to continue presenting

Owen said: 'You just want to finish the job if you sit in that chair where millions of people and more are watching you and listening to you'

ITV News at Ten presenter Rageh Omaar insisted on finishing the show after he contracted an illness while on air, despite bosses' pleas to bring in a stand-in anchor

'He refused to move. Even when he was told he had to go and that the team had called for medical help.

'Everyone did everything they could to help him. Rageh is a consummate professional.' 

Mr Omaar, ITV News's international affairs editor, was taken by ambulance to a nearby hospital where he then spent the night after staff at the broadcaster called paramedics.

He was discharged yesterday afternoon and was recovering with his family.

One friend of the newsreader suggested he didn't feel 'unwell' while he was stumbling over his words.

Both ITV and Mr Omaar's family were reluctant to give any details of the cause of his on-screen ailment but some experts have suggested the presenter exhibited signs of a mini-stroke, called a transient ischaemic attack.

It is caused by a temporary disruption in the blood supply to part of the brain caused by a travelling blood clot or the 'furring' of the arteries.

Fiona Clark, a staff nurse, claimed she had called ITV at 10.10pm and told them 'as an ICU nurse who worked in strokes that Rageh Omaar required an emergency ambulance, he was dysphasic, drooped left eye, slurred speech and agitated all Fast symptoms'. 

Rageh Omaar, pictured here on the Mount of Olives with Jerusalem in the background, is ITV's international affairs editor as well as a presenter of news bulletins 

Nicholas Owen, pictured on GB News today, worked for ITV for in the 1990s and 2000s

The Fast acronym – which stands for face, arms, speech and time – is a test to quickly identify if someone is having a stroke.

In a statement Mr Omaar thanked the show's viewers, saying: 'I would like to thank everyone for their kindness and good wishes, especially all the medical staff, all my wonderful colleagues at ITV News, and our viewers who expressed concern.

'At the time, I was determined to finish presenting the programme. I am grateful for all the support I've been given.'

But viewers accused ITV News of failing in its duty of care to Mr Omaar – despite not knowing what was happening in the studio.

There were calls on social media for television regulator Ofcom to investigate ITV's treatment of the Somalia-born presenter.

An ITV News spokesman said last night it appreciated News at Ten viewers were 'concerned about Rageh Omaar's wellbeing'.

They added: 'Following medical treatment at hospital, he is now recovering at home with his family. We are wishing Rageh a speedy recovery and look forward to him being back on screen when he feels ready.'

MailOnline has approached ITV and ITN for further comment today, while Ofcom said it could not confirm whether it had been contacted by viewers. 

Rageh Omaar has said in a statement: 'At the time, I was determined to finish presenting the programme. I am grateful for all the support I've been given'

There have been calls on social media for television regulator Ofcom to investigate ITV's treatment of Rageh Omaar after he was taken to hospital

Father-of-three Mr Omaar, who studied modern history at Oxford, made his name in his role as a foreign correspondent for the BBC during the invasion of Iraq and the fall of Baghdad in 2003.

In September 2006, he moved to Al Jazeera English, where he presented the nightly weekday documentary series and in January 2013 he became a special correspondent and presenter at ITV.

The broadcaster is married to Georgiana Rose Montgomery-Cuninghame, with whom he has three children, Loula, Sami and Zachary.

After the death of the late Queen Elizabeth, Mr Omaar was also chosen by ITV to cover her funeral on September 19, 2022.

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