Netherlands investigates infant’s death at overcrowded asylum seeker centre

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AMSTERDAM, Aug 25 (Reuters) – Dutch authorities are investigating the death of a 3-month-old baby at the country’s overcrowded main registration location for asylum seekers, the government’s Central Agency for the Reception of Asylum Seekers said on Thursday.

More than 700 asylum seekers have been sleeping outdoors at the location at Ter Apel in the northeast province of Groningen in the past few days. Conditions in the shelter have already prompted a lawsuit against the Dutch state.

The baby died from “unknown causes” in a sports gymnasium being used as a makeshift shelter for newcomers with nowhere else to sleep, Leon Veldt, a spokesman for the agency, told Reuters.

Conditions at the main reception centre have prompted the Dutch branch of international aid group Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders) to offer aid, the first time it has needed to in the Netherlands, the organisation said on Thursday.

The Dutch Council for Refugees, which has filed a suit against the government, says conditions in the centre are “inhumane” and violate European law.

The council’s suit, which is due to be heard on Sept. 15, demands improved conditions by Oct. 1, including access to clean water, showers, privacy, adequate food and healthcare.

Reporting by Anthony Deutsch and Stephanie van den Berg; Editing by Nick Macfie

Hundreds of asylum seekers sleep outside the gate at the application center in Ter Apel, The Netherlands, 25 August 2022. The Groningen application center has been busy for months. Asylum seekers’ centers no longer have a place and status holders cannot move on to a home due to, among other things, the overheated housing market. EPA-EFE/VINCENT JANNINK

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