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Life Sentences For 7 Men Who Gang-Raped Teen in Phang Nga

Five suspects in the rape case of a 14-year-old are led out of Khokkhoi Police Station in September 2017.

PHANG GNA — A court convicted 11 men and sentenced them to lengthy jail terms Thursday for raping a 14-year-old girl in Phang Nga province last year.

The Phang Nga provincial court said all defendants were guilty of multiple counts related to the attack on the underage girl. It said they gang-raped the victim in her home on Koh Raet 16 times between May 2016 and February 2017.

Worachit Kongbut, Chatchai Srirat, Boonpoj Nonsee, Chalerm Samin, Sucheep Sumen, Thawatchai Thaogu and Nuttawut Butnoi were sentenced to life in prison.

Worachit was accused of being the first to assault the girl before forcing her out to the beach to be raped by other men. He also filmed and took photos of the assaults to blackmail her. He and Boonpoj were accused of forcing the girl to take drugs before the men assaulted her.

Keerati Sumen was sentenced to 45 years in jail. Rangsan Chailiang got 20 years and 4 months. Sayan Sumen and Nawik Jareuk got 15 years each. All were also ordered to pay the girl and her mother 18 million baht in damages.

News about the assault broke after the mother filed charges with police last year, accusing up to 40 men in her community to have repeatedly assaulted her daughter, who was often left home alone at night while her parents went out to harvest rubber.

Community elders and relatives of the men denounced the family as liars and accused them of tainting their reputations. A protest was also held when some men were arrested.

Rochitdee Raimancha of the Muslims for Peace Foundation, which has represented the victim, said he was pleased with the ruling, and said the foundation will continue to help the girl and her mother, who have relocated to Bangkok.

An attorney for the accused, Sanphetch Thipmonthien, said they would file an appeal since he believes some of those convicted are innocent.

Related stories:

Police Arrest All 11 Suspects in Phang Nga Gang Rape Case

5 Men Held in Phang Nga Gang Rape Case

Police Seek 11 of 40 Men Accused of Raping Phang Nga Girl

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Police Arrest Suspect of Hit-and-Run that Killed Filipino

A bicycle that belonged to Filipino cyclist Russel Perez who died from hit-and-run crash in Chachoengsao.

CHACHOENGSAO — A driver accused of fatally hitting a Filipino cyclist with his van was arrested Thursday afternoon in eastern Thailand.

Police arrested Chutipan Buddawieng in Sa Kaeo province. The 29-year-old van driver allegedly ran a red light early Tuesday morning in Chacheongsao province, hitting cyclist Russel Perez before fleeing the scene.

Police were questioning Chutipan on Friday, according to Col. Nipon Klaisingh, chief of Sanphudat Police in Chachoengsao province.

The 55-year-old victim from Manila and several other cyclists were attending 1,000 BRM, a long-distance cycling rally. The event started Saturday, when cyclists left Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi Airport bound for Trat province.

Perez died on the way to hospital.

Chutipan’s van was later found at an auto repair shop in Bangkok’s Min Buri district. He reportedly arrived at the shop at 8am on Wednesday, telling the shop owner his van had hit an ox. Police collected DNA and fingerprints from the vehicle before obtaining an arrest warrant on the same day.

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Miss Grand Thailand Reaches Top 20

Photo: Miss Grand Thailand / Facebook

YANGON — Thailand’s representative to the Miss Grand International pageant was among 20 contestants in the contest’s final round Thursday night.

Miss Grand Thailand Nam-oi “Moss” Chanapan was one of 20 finalists from the original pool of 75 contestants vying for the title, and she left the The One Entertainment Park on Thursday night in Myanmar with Best in Evening Gown award.

“I’m surprised she didn’t make it to the top five, even though she’s totally qualified,” user Chutithep Pop Chotikachattham commented on the Miss Grand Thailand Facebook page. “But good job, Moss!”

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The winner was Miss Grand Paraguay, Clara Sosa, who had to be helped from the stage after fainting when the results were announced. Sosa, 25, was crowned by Miss Grand International 2017, Maria Jose Lora of Peru. Second place went to Meenakshi Chaudhary of India, who tried and failed to catch Sosa as she fell.

In July, Moss won Miss Grand Thailand while representing Phuket, although she is originally from Chaiyaphum. A crowd favorite, she was praised by fans for her humble background.

Our interview with Clara Sosa:

Our interview with Moss:

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Court Keeps Indonesia Woman Irked by Noisy Mosque in Prison

U.S. Vice President Mike Pence, center, is given a tour by the Grand Imam of Istiqlal Mosque Nasaruddin Umar, left, and the Chairman of the mosque Muhammad Muzammil Basyuni, right, during his 2017 visit to the largest mosque in Southeast Asia, in Jakarta. Photo: Adek Berry / Pool / Associated Press
U.S. Vice President Mike Pence, center, is given a tour by the Grand Imam of Istiqlal Mosque Nasaruddin Umar, left, and the Chairman of the mosque Muhammad Muzammil Basyuni, right, during his 2017 visit to the largest mosque in Southeast Asia, in Jakarta. Photo: Adek Berry / Pool / Associated Press

MEDAN, Indonesia — A High Court on Thursday upheld an 18-month prison sentence for a woman convicted of blasphemy in Indonesia after complaining about the volume of a mosque’s loudspeakers.

The woman’s lawyer, Ranto Sibarani, told The Associated Press that the decision would be appealed to the Supreme Court.

The ethnic Chinese woman, Meiliana, was sentenced in August, more than two years after her comments sparked rioting in her hometown Tanjung Balai on the island of Sumatra.

In a conversation with the daughter of the caretaker of her neighborhood mosque, Meiliana had commented that the five-times-daily call to prayer was too loud. Rumors spread that she wanted to stop the call to prayer and days later, mobs attacked her home and burned and ransacked at least 14 Buddhist temples.

Indonesia’s largest Muslim organizations have said her complaint wasn’t blasphemy and have criticized her imprisonment but a conservative group, Islamic Community Forum, said Meilana’s sentence was too light.

The case has highlighted how Indonesia’s blasphemy law has become a tool for Islamic hard-liners to persecute followers of minority religions in the world’s most populous Muslim nation.

Meiliana, who uses a single name, wasn’t in court for Thursday’s decision.

Her supporters say she is kept in a 30-square-meter (323-square-foot) cell with more than a dozen other women. Her husband and two sons feared for their safety and moved from Tanjung Balai to Medan, the capital of North Sumatra province.

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Police to Summon Rappers Who Criticized Military Govt

Image: Rap Against Dictatorship / YouTube
Image: Rap Against Dictatorship / YouTube

BANGKOK — A group of rappers that released a song lambasting the junta earlier this week may have broken the law, a deputy police chief said Friday.

Deputy police chief Pol. Gen Srivara Ransibrahmanakul said there’s a “50 percent chance” the song “My Country’s Got” (“Prathet Ku Mee“) by Rappers Against Dictatorship may have violated a junta order. Srivara did not elaborate on what order the song could have breached. In the 5-minute piece, the group of 10 take turns mocking and criticizing the junta’s rule.

Read: With ‘My Country’s Got,’ Thai Rap Voices Rare Dissent Against Junta

“Let me warn musicians to not do anything risky against the laws because it won’t be good for you and your family if it’s found that there was wrongdoing,” Srivara said.

He added that police would summon the rappers and that they were investigating the matter. Some junta critics have been charged with sedition since the May 2014 coup. The YouTube music video had been watched more than 840,000 times by Friday morning.

Rapper and co-producer Pratchayaa Surakamchonrot said Tuesday that he doesn’t believe the song violates the law. He said however that four of 10 rappers chose to remain anonymous for fear of facing a backlash from the junta.

Pratchayaa said Friday morning that he and his collaborators would not report to police until formally summoned.

The developments came two days after Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai told reporters other countries are amazed that the current administration is run by “a coup government but gives [citizens] full freedom.”

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Brain-Damaged Kid Muay Thai Fighters Prompt Call For Ban

Young Muay Thai boxers fight for a crowd of tourists in April near Railay Beach in Krabi province.
Young Muay Thai boxers fight for a crowd of tourists in April near Railay Beach in Krabi province.

BANGKOK — Muay Thai may be the pride of the kingdom, but new research says letting children fight in the ring can irreparably damage their minds.

Citing a new study by Mahidol University, medical advocates held a Thursday news conference in Bangkok to call for the boxing of minors under 15 to be regulated to prevent permanent brain damage.

A five-year neuropsychological study led by medical professor Jiraporn Laothamatas revealed that kid fighters suffer undetected brain damage which results in lower IQ results, reduced emotional self-restraint and a heightened the risk of Parkinson’s disease.

“The longer they fight, the lower their IQ and intelligence becomes. That’s their future,” Jiraporn said at the conference held at Ramathibodi Hospital. She added that children under 15 are more prone to experiencing brain damage than adults when hit in the head.

She said that while the precise number of boxers in the country under 15 is unavailable, estimates run from 100,000 to 300,000 minors – about 1 percent to 4 percent of the age group.

The group is lobbying the junta-appointed National Legislative Assembly to amend the 1999 Thai Boxing Act to regulate child boxing.

The group also called on the government to ban children under 13 from boxing. It also demanded those 12 to 15 obtain permission from provincial sports authorities before being allowed in the ring.

The five-year study compared 335 child boxers under 15 to 252 children of the same age and socio-economic backgrounds who had not boxed.

The results found that child boxers scored an average of 10 fewer points on IQ tests. Brain scans showed damage to their hippocampi and temporal lobes, iron accumulation in their brains that could affect vision and micro-hemorrhaging.

Jiraporn compared the injuries to people suffering concussions, brain inflammation and damage to the brain’s connective tissues caused by auto accidents.

“If, in the future, they become leaders, they will be less intelligent than children who don’t box,” Jiraporn said.

However, the group does not seek to outright ban child boxing, saying it wants to compromise with the traditional sport and societal expectations.

Jiraporn said boxing camps for young children are very common throughout rural Thailand and that the group has already been heavily criticized on social media.

Parliament will review the draft amendment.

A lot is riding on not just the popularity of the sport but its economic incentives, the director of the National Institute for Child and Family Development at Mahidol University said, as young boxers can win prizes worth several thousand baht.

Adisak Plitpornkarmpim added that the Labor Ministry does not consider it child labor and that schools promote boxing bouts for children. He said parents in poor families send their boys – as young as 5 or 6 – to fight for prizes.

“No age is safe for boxing, but we seek to ensure a balance between safety and the right to decide [to box]. Children under 12 should be banned from competitive bouts,” Adisak said, adding that only a few such child boxers end up as Muay Thai professionals, while the rest have to return to society with lower IQs, making their future livelihood more challenging.

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Missing American Found in Some Rocks on Koh Lipe

Police with Charles Kosydar on Thursday under a pile of rocks on Koh Lipe's Sunset Beach.

SATUN — A missing American tourist was found hiding in a pile of boulders Thursday on Koh Lipe after his worried friends went to the police.

Satun police said Charles Kosydar, 39, was reported missing in the early hours of Tuesday. He was found at 12:30pm today after island residents told police a man resembling him was seen near the rocks on Sunset Beach.

Police discovered an exhausted Kosydar under the rocks with small cuts on his hand. He was taken to a local health office for treatment.

Kosydar, who came to Lipe with three friends, reportedly apologized to the authorities for having caused a hassle. In an email to Khaosod English in July 2019, Kosydar said he was “incapacitated and needed to be rescued.”

“I was injured when I was by myself and unable to get help on my own,” he wrote.

He told police he would continue the trip with his friends and promised he wouldn’t go missing again.

Police lead Charles Kosydar away Thursday from a pile of rocks where he sought solitude on Koh Lipe's Sunset Beach.
Police lead Charles Kosydar away Thursday from a pile of rocks on Koh Lipe’s Sunset Beach.

Update: The article has been updated July 2019 following an email from Kosydar. He said he was not seeking solitude on the rocks, but was incapacitated and needed rescue.

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Rocker Sek Loso Found Guilty, Gets Long Prison Sentence

Sek Loso in custody Thursday at the Minburi Provincial Court.

BANGKOK — A poster boy for bad boy rock stars who is said to be struggling from mental illness was sentenced to almost four years in prison Thursday for firing a gun in the air and other related charges.

Seksan “Sek Loso” Sukpimai, 44, was convicted on multiple counts by the Minburi Provincial Court and given three years and nine months in prison, capping off a year of erratic behavior that began with his resisting arrest over the incident and culminated in an apparent psychological rupture live-streamed to the world.

On Dec. 30, 2017, Sek fired an automatic 9mm handgun into the air at a temple, an incident he also live-streamed over Facebook. When police arrived to apprehend him on New Year’s Eve, Sek refused to surrender and threatened to open fire on police in a standoff that ended with officers rushing his home.

For that episode, he got 18 months for armed obstruction of justice, six months for drug use and six months for discharging a gun in a residential area, making for two and a half years.

The court also handed down an additional 15 months months for physically assaulting Chanokkorn Boonpeng, his ex-wife’s partner, in 2016.

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Wiphakorn “Karn” Sookpimay, Sek Loso’s ex wife Thursday at Minburi Provincial Court.

The court said that they took into consideration Sek’s bipolar disorder, for which he recently underwent a month of hospital treatment. Still, the court ruled he was cognizant enough to realize that he was breaking the law; therefore, his sentence was not reduced or suspended.

Sek was later released on bail pending an appeal.

Sek has remained popular despite episodes of domestic violence and drug abuse over the years. In August, he made headlines for a series of bizarre, long-running videos streamed five days straight on Facebook. His wife and girlfriend staged an intervention, and his family told the public he had been suffering from mental health issued for years.

After he was discharged, he went live online again on Sept. 21 to tell his fans he was feeling fine.

Even his ex-wife, who has helped fill pages of tabloid ink during their stormy relationship, expressed concern.

“Why do you always make me cry?” Wiphakorn “Karn” Sookpimay, Sek’s ex-wife posted on her social media Thursday. “Even though you’ve hurt me a lot, I’m always ready to help you. We may not understand each other, but who cares. When you’re in trouble, I’ll never abandon you. I love you, my wandering friend.”

She also visited Sek in police custody in this Khaosod live video:

“To be honest, he’s not completely well yet. He’s still bipolar. So this stress makes me worried for his mental health,” Karn said. “I feel so sorry for him.”

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Related stories:

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Untreated Mental Illness Left Sek Loso Delusional, Living in Filth: Son

Girlfriend, Ex-Wife Drag ‘Sek Loso’ to Hospital

Sup With Sek Loso’s Five-Day Facebook Live Meltdown?

Rocker Sek Loso Arrested After Police Standoff

Update: Police Seek Trigger-Happy Sek Loso on Gun Charge

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Hospitals Imprison Patients in Thailand, Kenya, Congo, China

Detained patients lie on beds in August in the Kenyatta National Hospital in Nairobi, Kenya. Photo: Desmond Tiro / Associated Press
Detained patients lie on beds in August in the Kenyatta National Hospital in Nairobi, Kenya. Photo: Desmond Tiro / Associated Press

NAIROBI, Kenya — The Kenyatta National Hospital is east Africa’s biggest medical institution, home to more than a dozen donor-funded projects with international partners – a “Center of Excellence,” says the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The hospital’s website proudly proclaims its motto – “We Listen … We Care” – along with photos of smiling doctors, a vaccination campaign and staffers holding aloft a gold trophy at an awards ceremony.

But there are no pictures of Robert Wanyonyi, shot and paralyzed in a robbery more than a year ago. Kenyatta will not allow him to leave the hospital because he cannot pay his bill of nearly 4 million Kenyan shillings (USD$39,570). He is trapped in his fourth-floor bed, unable to go to India, where he believes doctors might help him.

This is the first of a two-part series on hospitals that detain patients if they cannot pay their bills.

At Kenyatta National Hospital and at an astonishing number of other hospitals around the world, if you don’t pay up, you don’t go home.

The hospitals often illegally detain patients long after they should be medically discharged, using armed guards, locked doors and even chains to hold those who have not settled their accounts. Mothers and babies are sometimes separated. Even death does not guarantee release: Kenyan hospitals and morgues are holding hundreds of bodies until families can pay their loved ones’ bills, government officials say.

Dozens of doctors, nurses, health experts, patients and administrators told The Associated Press of imprisonments in hospitals in at least 30 other countries, including Nigeria and Congo, China and Thailand, Lithuania and Bulgaria, and others in Latin America and the Middle East.

The AP investigation built on a report last year by the British think-tank Chatham House; its experts found more than 60 press reports of patient detention in 14 countries in Asia and sub-Saharan Africa.

“What’s striking about this issue is that the more we look for this, the more we find it,” said Dr. Ashish Jha, director of the Harvard Global Health Institute, who was not involved in the British research. “It’s probably hundreds of thousands if not millions of people that this affects worldwide. It is not something that is only happening in a small number of countries, but the problem is that nobody is looking at this and it is way off the public health radar.”

Some examples:

– In the Philippines, Annalyn Manalo was held at Mount Carmel Diocesan General Hospital in Lucena City for 1½ months starting last December following treatment for heart problems. Administrators refused initially to allow her family to pay in installments – and the cost of each extra day in detention was added to the bill.

“We were treated like criminals,” said Manalo’s husband, Sigfredo. “The security guards would come and check on us all the time.”

– In Congo’s second city of Lubumbashi, the AP visited more than 20 hospitals and clinics and found that all but one routinely detained patients who failed to pay, even though the practice is illegal there.

– In Bangalore, India, Emmanuel Malagi was detained in a private hospital for three months after he was treated for a spinal tumor, according to his brother, Christanand. Prevented from seeing him, his family scrambled unsuccessfully to pay his nearly 1.4 million rupee ($19,281) bill – and when he died, the hospital demanded another 10 lakh ($13,771) to release the body.

– In Malaysia, a medical student from the Netherlands on a diving trip got the bends. He couldn’t afford his decompression treatment; the hospital locked him in a room for four days, with no food or drink, until he was able to get the money, according to Saskia Mostert, a Dutch academic who has researched hospital detentions.

–In Bolivia, a government ombudsman reported that 49 patients were detained in hospitals or clinics in the last two years because they couldn’t pay, despite a law that prohibits the practice.

During several August visits to Kenyatta National Hospital, The Associated Press witnessed armed guards in military fatigues standing watch over patients, and saw where detainees slept on bedsheets on the floor in cordoned-off rooms. Guards prevented one worried father from seeing his detained toddler. All despite a court ruling years ago that found the detentions were illegal.

Health experts decry hospital imprisonment as a human rights violation. Yet the United Nations, U.S. and international health agencies, donors and charities all have remained silent while pumping billions of dollars into these countries to support splintered health systems or to fight outbreaks of diseases including AIDS and malaria.

“It’s the dirty underbelly of global health that nobody wants to talk about,” said Sophie Harman, a health academic at Queen Mary University of London.

“People know patients are being held prisoner, but they probably think they have bigger battles in public health to fight, so they just have to let this go.”

Hospital detentions, some experts argue, can be traced to policies pushed decades ago by the World Bank, the World Health Organization, UNICEF and others who made loans to developing countries on condition that they charge patients fees for medical services. Without explicit protections in place to protect the poor, they say, the policies gave countries the freedom to extract health care payments however they saw fit – including detaining patients.

The practice appears to be most prevalent in countries with fragile, underfunded health systems where there is little government accountability. But the problem has also surfaced in wealthier countries, with patients being detained in hospitals in countries including India, Thailand, China and Iran.

In many countries when patients cannot afford to pay for health care, they are usually either sent to a public hospital where treatment is covered by the state or refused help altogether. In some hospitals in Cameroon and elsewhere, for example, the problem of patient imprisonment was solved by some institutions by simply demanding payment upfront.

Where patients are imprisoned, hospitals acknowledge it is not necessarily profitable. But many say it often leads at least to partial payment and serves as a deterrent.

Unlike many hospitals in developed countries, African hospitals don’t always provide food, clothing or bedding for patients, so holding onto them does not necessarily incur a significant cost. Detained patients typically rely on relatives to bring them food while those without obliging family members resort to begging for help from staff or other patients.

Dr. Festus Njuguna, a pediatric oncologist at the Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital in Eldoret, about 300 kilometers northwest of Nairobi, said the institution regularly holds children with cancer who have finished their treatment, but whose parents cannot pay. The children are typically left on the wards for weeks and months at a time, long after their treatment has ended.

“It’s not a very good feeling for the doctors and nurses who have treated these patients, to see them kept like this,” Njuguna said.

Still, some officials openly defend the practice.

“We can’t just let people leave if they don’t pay,” said Leedy Nyembo-Mugalu administrator of Congo’s Katuba Reference Hospital. He said holding patients wasn’t an issue of human rights, but simply a way to conduct business: “No one ever comes back to pay their bill a month or two later.”

At many Kenyan hospitals, including Kenyatta, officials armed with rifles patrol the hallways and guard the hospital’s gates. Patients must show hospital guards a discharge form to prove they’re allowed to leave and even visitors must sometimes surrender their identification cards before seeing patients.

In its 2016 financial report, Kenyatta’s auditor-general said the hospital lost more than $470,000 in fees from patients who “absconded” without paying. That year, the hospital reported total revenue of more than $115 million.

Patient detentions at Kenyatta have been flagged for years, among other concerns. In January, demonstrators called for an investigation into allegations of rape and sexual harassment of patients at the hospital. Kenya’s Human Rights Commission attempted to conduct an audit of Kenyatta, but officials refused to cooperate and have ignored all requests for information about detained patients.

“This is something that hospital authorities have been trying to keep under wraps,” said George Morara, vice chairperson of the country’s national commission on human rights. He said the number of Kenyans imprisoned in hospitals is “disturbingly high” and that the practice is “ubiquitous in public and private hospitals.”

He said patients have been held at Kenyatta for up to two years, and it was reasonable to suspect that hundreds of patients could be detained there at any time.

Kenya’s ministry of health and Kenyatta canceled several scheduled interviews with the AP and declined to respond to repeated requests for comment.

After she was elected to Kenya’s Parliament, Esther Passaris visited Kenyatta last December to check on supporters who were injured in election violence. She was stunned to find that patients were incarcerated.

“There was one lady I met in the corridor and she was crying, ‘please let me go home,'” Passaris said. The woman had hurt her back and hip. She had been medically cleared to leave, but wasn’t allowed to go home because she hadn’t paid her bill. “I just thought, ‘Oh my goodness, it’s almost Christmas, how can these people not go back to their families?'”

Passaris started an online campaign to have the patients released. Just before the holidays, Kenyatta let more than 450 leave – a victory, Passaris says, though the problem remains.

“Unfortunately,” she said, “you can’t get water from a rock, so some of these patients stay for a year because they don’t have the money.”

Foreign agencies and companies that operate where patients are held hostage typically have very little to say about it. Some experts said the international health community’s failure to address the issue has undermined its own goals.

“Aid money becomes ineffective and useless in an environment where people are terrified they’re going to be locked up,” said Robert Yates, a health policy expert at Chatham House, the British think tank that reported on imprisoned patients. “It’s very embarrassing for the global health community that these detentions have become so embedded into countries that they seem normal, and so the whistle needs blowing on all of us.”

Said Harvard’s Jha: “There are basic human rights abuses that we cannot ignore in the 21st century. It is not too much to ask that when private companies like pharmaceuticals or federal agencies like the CDC become aware that their partners engage in such a fundamental violation of human rights, that they hold them accountable and work to end these practices.”

The CDC provides about $1.5 million every year to Kenyatta and Pumwani Maternity Hospital, via funding from the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, or PEPFAR. At Kenyatta, the CDC covers treatment costs for patients with HIV and tuberculosis, trains health workers and helps with HIV testing, among other programs. The agency declined to comment on whether it was aware that patients were regularly detained at Kenyatta and Pumwani or if the agency condones the practice.

Among its other partnerships, Kenyatta has been working with the University of Washington for more than 30 years. Dr. Carey Farquhar, director of the university’s Kenya Research and Training Center, said she didn’t recall seeing any detained patients at Kenyatta, though was not surprised that it happened – she knew of no hospitals there that did not detain patients.

“It does make me uncomfortable,” she said.

Farquhar said the issue “doesn’t cross our radar as much” since her university is focused on medical research, rather than patient care. She added that she might raise the issue with her colleagues at Kenyatta but that “the solution has to come from within.”

The drugmaker Novartis also partnered with Kenyatta for several years, helping pay for some of its doctors to study kidney transplant techniques at a Barcelona hospital. Novartis declined to comment on whether its staffers had seen detained patients at Kenyatta or whether it approved of the practice.

Dr. Agnes Soucat of WHO said the U.N. agency was aware of hospital detentions and confirmed they happened “quite frequently.”

“We do not support this in any way, but the problem has been documenting where it happens,” said Soucat, director of WHO’s department of health systems, financing and governance. To date, WHO has made no attempt to collect data on hospital detentions and says such information is hard to find. The AP obtained patient lists, records and bills from about a dozen hospitals in Congo detailing imprisonment practices.

And though WHO has issued hundreds of health recommendations – from treating AIDS to Zika – the agency has never published any guidance advising countries not to imprison people in their hospitals.

Soucat said WHO officials in more than a dozen countries had expressed their concerns about detained patients to ministers of health, but that those discussions were private.

One international organization did fight publicly for detained patients.

Researchers for the Center for Reproductive Rights, which acts to support women’s health around the world, were conducting a study of maternal health care in Kenya in early 2012 when they learned of the cases of Maimuna Awuor Omuya and Margaret Oliele.

Unable to pay her bill at Pumwani Maternity Hospital after the delivery of her sixth child, Omuya and her baby were imprisoned along with more than 60 other women in a damp ward, in September 2010. She often slept on the wet ground next to a flooded toilet. Mother and child were released after nearly a month, but only when one of Omuya’s friends appealed to the mayor to intervene.

Two months later, Oliele arrived at Pumwani. During a botched cesarean section, doctors left a pair of surgical scissors inside Oliele’s stomach; a second surgery was needed to remove the scissors and she later suffered a ruptured bladder and a blood infection. When she couldn’t pay her hospital fees, Oliele was taken to a detention ward.

“I tried to escape, but when I got to the main gate, I was taken by the security guards,” Oliele told AP. “I had no clothes on and still had the catheter in my stomach. The guards then forcefully took me back to the hospital where they handcuffed me to a bed, while claiming that I had gone mad.” She was held for six days.

Center for Reproductive Rights lawyers resolved to take up the cause of detained patients, bringing suit on behalf of Omuya and Oliele.

“These were two very appalling cases and their treatment was very degrading,” said Evelyne Opondo, a senior regional director at the center who oversaw the case.

They won. In September 2015, Kenya’s High Court ruled the women’s detention violated numerous human rights enshrined in the constitution and was therefore illegal. The High Court described the women’s detention as “cruel, inhuman and degrading.” The court further ordered the Kenyan government to “take the necessary steps to protect all patients from arbitrary detention in health care facilities.”

But three years later, it appears little has changed.

“People are still being detained,” Oliele said. “They should stop treating people like animals and treat them as fellow human beings.”

Opondo said detentions continue because nobody has asked hospitals “to provide answers, because they’ve not been held accountable.” She estimated there could be many thousands of people across the country detained, based on information received by the center and news reports.

Although the court instructed the government to produce guidelines on how hospitals should waive fees for patients unable to pay, Opondo said the proposed fixes have not gone far enough. A program that provides free maternity care is only available at a select number of private hospitals and does not include post-delivery care.

Earlier this month, Kenya’s High Court ruled again that imprisoning patients “is not one of the acceptable avenues (for hospitals) to recover debt.” The case involved a man detained at Nairobi Women’s Hospital since June 25; the judge ordered his immediate release despite the outstanding bill. Kenyan politicians also will soon debate a proposed amendment to the country’s health law that will explicitly make patient detentions illegal.

The latest amendment was submitted by MP Jared Okelo, a member of Parliament who described the imprisonment of mothers as “rampant.”

Omuya is still scarred by her detention at Pumwani. She says she developed chronic pneumonia after being held in the damp, cold conditions there and has not been able to work full-time since.

Neither Omuya nor Oliele have been paid the damages awarded to them by the court: Omuya was to receive 1,500,000 shillings ($14,842) from the hospital while Oliele was to receive 500,000 shillings ($4,948).

And Omuya’s family has had another run-in with a Nairobi hospital.

Several months ago, Omuya’s youngest brother was admitted to Mbagathi District Hospital after falling ill and collapsing.

“We don’t know what it was, but the doctors told us he needed many medications to treat, that it was a poisoning,” she said.

Doctors completed their treatment and presented her brother with a bill of about 134,000 shillings ($1,326).

When Omuya and her family were unable to raise the necessary funds, the situation took an unwelcome but familiar turn: her brother was imprisoned. Hospital managers asked the family to pay at least half the outstanding amount, but after about a month and a half, they had only scraped together about $120. Omuya said her brother was freed only when his doctor negotiated his release.

“Detentions still go on because there are no rights here,” she said. “What I suffered, I want no one else to suffer.”

Story: Maria Cheng

Related stories:

Doctors in Squalor, Patients on Balconies at Cash-Starved Hospitals

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Asia Shares Skid, Tokyo Down 3.6%, After Rout on Wall St

A woman walks past an electronic board showing Hong Kong share index outside a local bank Thursday in Hong Kong. Photo: Vincent Yu / Associated Press
A woman walks past an electronic board showing Hong Kong share index outside a local bank Thursday in Hong Kong. Photo: Vincent Yu / Associated Press

BANGKOK — Shares tumbled in Asia on Thursday, led by declines in semiconductor makers and other technology-oriented shares, after another torrent of selling on Wall Street.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 index sank sharply on the open but regained some lost ground, falling 3.7 percent to 21,267.18. The Shanghai Composite index slipped 1.4 percent to 2,567.92 and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index skidded 2.1 percent to 24,721.31. Thailand’s SET was trading at 1,602.11 on Thursday morning, a 1.3 percent drop.

As in New York, losses were heaviest for technology companies. Semiconductor maker Tokyo Electron lost 4 percent and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. dropped 4.4 percent. South Korea’s Samsung Electronics sank 3.8 percent. Japanese telecoms and energy giant Softbank lost 4.1 percent.

But other sectors also felt the pain.

Toyota Motor Corp. gave up 2.1 percent while Hong Kong-based retail supply chain giant Li & Fung Ltd. lost 2 percent. Also in Hong Kong, airline Cathay Pacific’s shares dropped as much as 6.5 percent after it said it had discovered a data breach affecting 9.4 million passengers.

Futures trading suggested losses might reverse on the open in New York. The contract for the S&P 500 was up 0.2 percent at 2,670.80 while that for the Dow Jones Industrial Average edged up less than 0.1 percent to 24,620.00.

Recent volatility in U.S. markets has weighed on Asian markets for some time, despite relatively strong growth in the region.

“If people are struggling to find a driver I suggest, they wake up and smell the coffee,” Stephen Innes of OANDA said in a commentary.

“With the worrisome prospect of U.S. tax cuts having a much shorter shelf life than expected and with the asynchronous global growth sinkhole expanding, equities will have no place to go except into the tank, taking global risk sentiment along with it,” he said.

Elsewhere in Asia, South Korea’s Kospi fell 2 percent to 2,053.75 and the S&P ASX/200 dropped 2.2 percent to 5,701.80. India’s Sensex fell 0.7 percent to 33,781.56. Shares were lower in most markets apart from Indonesia.

Still, some market observers were taking the latest volatility in stride.

“I think the Hong Kong market is really very close to bottom, because when you look at the value, it’s very extremely cheap. So how low can it get? Maybe it will reach 24,000 before we find the bottom,” said analyst Francis Lun of Geo Securities.

New York trading overnight saw the Nasdaq composite with its hefty roster of tech stocks bear the brunt of the sell-off. It has now fallen more than 10 percent below its August peak in what Wall Street calls a “correction,” losing 4.4 percent on Wednesday to 7,108.40. That was its biggest drop since August 2011 but it is still up 3 percent for the year.

The S&P 500 lost 3.1 percent to 2,656.10 and has lost about 9.4 percent from its Sept. 20 peak. The Dow tumbled 2.4 percent to 24,583.42. The Russell 2000 index of smaller-company stocks gave up 3.8 percent to 1,468.70 and is down 4.4 percent for the year.

Disappointing quarterly results and outlooks are stoking investors’ jitters over future growth in corporate profits. Bond prices rose, sending yields lower as traders sought safe-haven investments.

“Investors are on pins and needles,” said Erik Davidson, chief investment officer at Wells Fargo Private Bank. “There has definitely been a change in sentiment for investors starting with the volatility we had last week. The sentiment and the outlook seems to be turning more negative, or at the very least, less rosy.”

Investors are increasingly concerned that corporate America’s tax cut-fueled earnings growth this year will fade in coming months amid rising inflation, uncertainty over the escalating trade conflict between the U.S. and China and the likelihood of higher interest rates. Recent signs that the housing market is cooling are fueling speculation that U.S. economic growth will start to slow next year.

Bond prices rose, sending the yield on the 10-year Treasury note down to 3.12 percent from 3.16 percent late Tuesday. The slide in bond yields came as traders sought out lower-risk assets.

Technology stocks and media and communications companies accounted for much of the selling. Banks, health care and industrial companies also took heavy losses, outweighing gains by utilities and other high-dividend stocks.

Most companies that missed earnings expectations or issued cautionary outlooks were punished.

AT&T sank after reporting weak subscriber numbers, and chipmaker Texas Instruments fell 8.2 percent after reporting slumping demand.

Shares in iRobot plunged 12.3 percent to USD$80.49 after the robotics technology company said tariffs will reduce its profitability in the fourth quarter.

United Parcel Service slid 5.5 percent to $107.93 after the shipping company reported weak international revenue, while the strong dollar and high fuel prices also hurt its results.

About 24 percent of the companies in the S&P 500 had reported third-quarter results as of Wednesday. Of those, 57 percent delivered earnings and revenue results that topped Wall Street’s forecasts.

High-flying companies like Netflix and Amazon took some of the biggest losses Wednesday. Netflix gave back 9.4 percent to $301.83 and Amazon dropped 5.9 percent to $1,664.20.

AT&T was among the big decliners in the media and communications sector, dropping 8.1 percent to $30.36 after the communication giant’s latest quarterly results fell short of Wall Street’s expectations.

Boeing was one of the few gainers Wednesday. It rose 1.3 percent to $354.65 after the defense contractor’s latest quarterly results topped analysts’ forecasts. The company also raised its estimates for the year, citing faster orders for aircraft.

In other trading, benchmark U.S. crude lost 71 cents to $66.11 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. On Wednesday it edged up 0.6 percent to settle at $66.82 a barrel in New York. Brent crude, used to price international oils, declined 72 cents to $75.45 a barrel.

The dollar weakened to 112.04 yen from 112.23 yen. The euro rose to $1.1408 from $1.1393.

Story: Elaine Kurtenbach

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