Turkish Prosecutor Charges 47 People over Deaths of Newborns

Turkish police seen in Istanbul - File/AFP
Turkish police seen in Istanbul - File/AFP
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Turkish Prosecutor Charges 47 People over Deaths of Newborns

Turkish police seen in Istanbul - File/AFP
Turkish police seen in Istanbul - File/AFP

An Istanbul prosecutor has indicted 47 people, including doctors and nurses, over the inappropriate treatment of babies for profit, causing the death of at least 10 newborns in one of Türkiye's biggest health scandals in recent years.

The Health Ministry has shut down nine private hospitals as a result of the investigation, with a total 19 health institutions deemed to bear responsibility, the indictment said.

The suspects are accused of creating a criminal group to put newborns in certain private hospitals and receive payments from Türkiye's social security body for inappropriate and sometimes fake treatments, the indictment obtained by Reuters said.

The main opposition CHP party has sought a parliamentary inquiry into the affair and called for the resignation of Health Minister Kemal Memisoglu. He has said his ministry's inspections of hospitals will now be carried out "more strictly than ever".

Two of the suspects, working on an emergency phone line, had sought newborns that could be sent to these hospitals for intensive care treatment, according to the 1,399-page indictment, filed in an Istanbul court last week.

It said newborns then became the victims of malpractice or inadequate medical care, with medicine meant for them sold to others and some dying due to infections contracted in the units.

The goal of the criminal gang was "to obtain financial gain, rather than improving the health conditions of the patients," it added.

The suspects, including two doctors and 11 nurses, denied the charges, saying they had not intentionally sent the newborns to particular hospitals and that the babies had received the necessary treatment, the indictment said.

The charges the suspects face include forming a criminal group, fraud, forgery of official documents and murder by negligence. Some defendants could be sentenced to as many as 589 years in jail if found guilty.

Twenty-two suspects have been jailed pending trial.



Netherlands to Limit Asylum Permits in Bid to Curb Migration

Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof arrives to address the 79th United Nations General Assembly at UN headquarters in New York, US, September 26, 2024. (Reuters)
Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof arrives to address the 79th United Nations General Assembly at UN headquarters in New York, US, September 26, 2024. (Reuters)
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Netherlands to Limit Asylum Permits in Bid to Curb Migration

Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof arrives to address the 79th United Nations General Assembly at UN headquarters in New York, US, September 26, 2024. (Reuters)
Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof arrives to address the 79th United Nations General Assembly at UN headquarters in New York, US, September 26, 2024. (Reuters)

The Netherlands will limit permits for asylum seekers to a maximum of three years and will introduce border controls next month, as part of a broader clampdown on asylum migration, Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof said on Friday.

The measure is part of a package of measures aimed at curbing asylum migration, an objective of the new right-wing government led by Geert Wilders' anti-Muslim party PVV.

As well as scrapping open-ended permits to stay once someone had been registered as an asylum seeker, the government will also scrap preferential housing for those asylum seekers permitted to stay, instead offering basic shared units, while limiting possibilities for them to reunite with their families.

After the three years expire, permits will be reassessed to see if someone should leave or be granted an extension.

Detention centers for refused or undocumented asylum seekers will be expanded, aimed at their swift return to their country of origin, Schoof said.

Following a similar move by neighboring Germany last month, the Netherlands will introduce targeted border controls from the end of November aimed at tackling illegal migration.

Schoof acknowledged he could not estimate what effect the measures would ultimately have, but stressed their need for the government's promised crackdown on migration.

"We'll have to see what it does, you can't express that in specific numbers. But this whole package will no doubt affect how many people will come to the Netherlands and the number that will leave," he told reporters.

Wilders' promises of being tough on asylum migration brought him a large win at the election last November, even though asylum applications per capita in the Netherlands are no higher than the EU average.

But after years of budget cuts, the country's only registration center for asylum seekers has been struggling to deal with the flow of migrants, forcing hundreds of refugees at times to sleep rough.

The Dutch association of city councils on Friday criticized the plans, telling the ANP news agency they would bring chaos and would be difficult to implement.