Yem
Chroeum, 55, is escorted by Cambodian police officials at a court in Battambang
province, on October 20, 2015 ©- (AFP)
|
An unlicensed Cambodian
doctor was sentenced to 25 years in prison on Thursday after he was found
guilty of infecting more than 200 people with HIV, including some who later
died. The
case has shone a spotlight on the chronically underfunded healthcare system in
the impoverished nation where many have to rely on self-taught or unlicensed
medics to receive treatment.
AFP report continues:
Yem
Chroeum, 55, was facing the prospect of life in prison but his murder charge
was reduced by the court to a lesser manslaughter offence, his defence lawyer
said.
"My
client still insists he is innocent," lawyer Em Sovann told AFP by
telephone after the verdict was announced.
"I
will represent him if he wants to appeal this conviction," he added.
The
rural doctor was convicted of infecting locals in the remote village of Roka in
western Battambang province by reusing dirty needles.
For
millions of Cambodians -- especially the poor and those in isolated regions --
unlicensed doctors are the only realistic healthcare option for everyday
ailments.
World
Bank figures say Cambodia, one of Asia's poorest nations, has just 0.2 doctors
for every 100,000 people, on a par with Afghanistan.
Similarly
impoverished Myanmar has 0.4 per 100,000, while France boasts 3.2 per 100,000.
Much
of Cambodia's shortfall is made up by unlicensed practitioners, many of whom
are self taught.
But
the HIV infections in Roka shocked the country and saw the government vow to
crack down on unlicensed healthcare providers.
Some
of those who were infected testified at the trial.
Loeum
Lorn, 52, said he and four of his family members had contracted HIV.
"We
are his (the doctor's) victims but it was only late on that we discovered we
were infected," he told reporters last month outside the trial.
He
added that around 10 villagers who were infected, mostly elderly, had since
died.
During
the trial, prosecutors accused the doctor of hiding the facts and changing his
story.
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