Cambodia jails doctor for mass HIV infections
BBC | 3 December 2015
An unlicensed Cambodian doctor has
been sentenced to 25 years in prison for infecting about 200 people with
HIV, some of whom later died.
A court found that Yem Chrin, 56,
had reused dirty needles when treating patients in the village of Roka
in north-western Battambang province.
Yem Chrin's charge had been reduced from murder to manslaughter. He said he was only trying to help the community.
Unlicensed doctors provide care in many parts of rural Cambodia.
Many
are self-taught but poor medical facilities and funding mean they are
often the only healthcare option for millions of Cambodians.
Spared life sentence
Authorities detected the scale of the infections after a 74-year-old man tested positive for HIV in November last year.
Yem Chrin was arrested a month later. He admitted reusing syringes but denied he had intentionally spread the virus.
Provincial
court judge Yich Na Chheavy said in the verdict: "The court found Yem
Chrin guilty of operating health treatment without licence, injecting
people with syringes that spread HIV and torturing people to die."
Reducing the charge to manslaughter had spared Yem Chrin a life sentence.
His
lawyer, Em Sovann, told Agence France-Presse news agency: "My client
still insists he is innocent. I will represent him if he wants to appeal
this conviction."
Yem Chrin had reportedly practised in the area since 1996 and police said he was a well-respected doctor.
Cambodia
suffered a high HIV prevalence rate in the 1990s but a safe-sex
campaign has been successful in bringing it down from 2% in 1998 to 0.7%
last year, UN figures show.
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