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Surge in Turkish COVID-19 cases pits doctors against politicians

Doctors across Turkey wore black ribbons this week to commemorate colleagues who have died, part of protests which also included a social media campaign with a message for the government: "You can't manage it; we are exhausted".(File photo)

Resurgent coronavirus cases in Turkey are fueling tensions between doctors who say the official figures underplay the scale of the outbreak and politicians who accuse the country's medical association of undermining efforts to contain it on.

More than 1,600 new cases and 60 deaths from COVID-19 are now reported daily, well off peak levels in April but rising steadily, with average numbers of deaths now three times the rates recorded between June and August.

Doctors across Turkey wore black ribbons this week to commemorate colleagues who have died, part of protests which also included a social media campaign with a message for the government: "You can't manage it; we are exhausted".

Many doctors question the official COVID-19 numbers, saying that although they don't have their own independent nationwide data, the scale of cases they see at a local level does not tally with the bigger picture presented by the government.

Doctor Halis Yerlikaya, who works in a hospital in the southeastern province of Diyarbakir, said the number of cases announced by the government "does not reflect the reality."

Wearing a black ribbon on his white medical coat, he said doctors wanted to highlight the challenges and risks they faced.

The doctors' campaign prompted a blunt rebuke from President Tayyip Erdogan's parliamentary ally, who accused them of treachery and called for the medics association to be shut down.

"The Turkish Medics Association is as dangerous as coronavirus and is disseminating threats," tweeted Devlet Bahceli of the Nationalist Movement Party, whose alliance with Erdogan's AK Party sustains the president's parliamentary majority.

Health Minister Fahrettin Koca has dismissed the association's criticism of COVID-19 data, saying he has repeatedly highlighted the threat posed by the growing numbers and has not played down the challenges facing hospitals.

The country of around 83 million people has so far reported about 300,000 cases of COVID-19, with nearly 7,400 deaths.

(Source: Reuters)


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