PDA

View Full Version : Turkey , 3 years in prison if medical aid is given to people



halffull
19th January 2014, 12:11
A controversial medical aid law has come into force in Turkey, criminalizing the provision of emergency first aid without government authorization.

The law took effect on Saturday, one day after the bill was signed into law by President Abdullah Gul.

Under the law, those convicted could face a three-year jail term or a fine of up to nearly USD 1 million.

The move has sparked an outcry from human rights activities fearing that the law could be used by police to intimidate medics treating protesters injured in anti-government demonstrations -- like those that rocked Turkey in 2013.

Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) has described the law as another attempt by the government of Prime Minster Recep Tayyip Erdogan to silent dissent.


“Passing a bill that criminalizes emergency care and punishes those who care for injured protesters is part of the Turkish government’s relentless effort to silence any opposing voices,” said PHR senior medical advisor, Vincent Iacopino, who added, “This kind of targeting of the medical community is not only repugnant, but puts everyone’s health at risk.”

UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Health Anand Grover, said days before the law came into effect that if adopted, “it will have a chilling effect on the availability and accessibility of emergency medical care in a country prone to natural disasters and a democracy that is not immune from demonstrations.”

During the nationwide protests of 2013, the Turkish doctors’ association repeatedly accused government forces of preventing medics from treating injured people.

Six people died and some 8,000 others were injured in clashes between police and anti-government protesters last year.

SY9Nnki6kck




http://www.presstv.ir/detail/2014/01/19/346473/controversial-bill-becomes-law-in-turkey/

Snowflower
19th January 2014, 13:21
The psychopaths in power positions are really running scared, eh?

ulli
19th January 2014, 13:43
The psychopaths in power positions are really running scared, eh?

The types of people who seek government positions have always functioned that way,
which is why they seek political power in the first place.

True public service should stem from love for one's people,...
but those few who would feel called to perform such service
don't always have the guts nor stamina to work alongside the
corrupt characters that go into politics for purely selfish reasons.
And those are in the majority in most countries at the moment.

Flash
19th January 2014, 15:39
Turkey is as corrupt if not more than USA, the difference being that in Turkey it is almost in the open. Turkey has been a dictature up to the 80's and it is still quite apparent. Turkish people, contrary to their American counterparts, are not fooled by such moved, they know it means dictature, they have seen it too often, while Americans are slowly cooking without seeing it.

But Turkish government is absolutely corrupt.

I am sorry for the Turkish people and their doctors.

Mulder
20th January 2014, 00:36
This law is against a doctor's hippocratic oath and should be against treaties Turkey has signed. Maybe doctors shouldn't treat anyone and just go on strike?