Two Dutch teens found dead in Istanbul hotel

This handout photograph taken on August 22,2025 and released on August 23,2025 by Turkish news agency DHA (Demiroren News Agency) shows the entrance of a hotel where two Dutch citizan teenager brothers found death, at Fatih district, in Istanbul. (AFP PHOTO / DHA (Demiroren News Agency)
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Updated 23 August 2025
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Two Dutch teens found dead in Istanbul hotel

  • The boys, aged 15 and 17, were deceased when police and paramedics arrived at the hotel where they were staying
  • Istanbul police have launched an investigation with initial suspicion falling on a restaurant meal they had eaten

ISTANBUL: Two Dutch teenagers were found dead in their Istanbul hotel room and their father hospitalized, Turkish media reported on Saturday, with initial suspicion falling on a restaurant meal they had eaten.
The boys, aged 15 and 17, were deceased when police and paramedics arrived at the hotel where they were staying, in the Fatih district, near Istanbul’s Blue Mosque and Grand Bazaar, according to the NTV television channel.
“When they arrived, ambulance paramedics noted the two children were deceased. The father was taken to hospital by ambulance” in a state of shock, the channel reported.
The three had been vacationing in Turkiye and were believed to have gone to the touristy Taksim district for dinner, media said.
The 57-year-old father told police he had gone with his sons to Taksim “but did not eat,” the Haber Turk news outlet reported.
Later that evening, after returning to the hotel, the father called out to the boys, who did not respond. A hotel employee, Mehmet Kirdag, heard the father crying for help, NTV reported.
“When I knocked at the door and entered, the two sons were dead, one of them in bed, the other on the floor... When paramedics arrived, the two young men were deceased. The father was in a state of shock,” Kirdag said.
Istanbul police have launched an investigation, NTV reported.


Pakistan is latest Asian country to step up checks for deadly Nipah virus

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Pakistan is latest Asian country to step up checks for deadly Nipah virus

  • Vietnam, Thailand, Singapore, Hong Kong, Malaysia and Indonesia have also tightened screening
  • Nipah has high mortality rate but not easily transmitted; there is also no vaccine for it
LAHORE/HANOI: Authorities in Pakistan have ordered enhanced screening of people entering the country for signs of infections of the deadly Nipah virus after India confirmed two cases, adding to the number of Asian countries stepping up controls.
Thailand, Singapore, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Indonesia and Vietnam have also tightened screening at airports.
The Nipah virus can cause fever and brain inflammation and has a high mortality rate. There is also no vaccine. But transmission from person to person is not easy and typically requires prolonged contact with an infected individual.
“It has become imperative to strengthen preventative and surveillance measures at Pakistan’s borders,” the Border Health Services department said in a statement.
“All travelers shall undergo ⁠thermal screening and clinical assessment at the Point of Entry,” which includes seaports, land borders and airports, the department added.
The agency said travelers would need to provide transit history for the preceding 21-day period to check whether they had been through “Nipah-affected or high-risk regions.”
There are no direct flights between Pakistan and India and travel between the two countries is extremely limited, particularly since their worst fighting in decades in May last year.
In Hanoi, the Vietnamese capital’s health department on Wednesday ⁠also ordered the screening of incoming passengers at Noi Bai airport, particularly those arriving from India and the eastern state of West Bengal, where the two health workers were confirmed to have the virus in late December.
Passengers will be checked with body temperature scanners to detect suspected cases. “This allows for timely isolation, epidemiological investigation,” the department said in a statement.
That follows measures by authorities in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam’s largest city, who said they had tightened health controls at international border crossings.
India’s health ministry said this week that authorities have identified and traced 196 contacts linked to the two cases with none showing symptoms and all testing negative for the virus.
Nipah is a rare viral infection that spreads largely from infected ⁠animals, mainly fruit bats, to humans. It can be asymptomatic but it is often very dangerous, with a case fatality rate of 40 percent to 75 percent, depending on the local health care system’s capacity for detection and management, according to the World Health Organization.
The virus was first identified just over 25 years ago during an outbreak among pig farmers in Malaysia and Singapore, although scientists believe it has circulated in flying foxes, or fruit bats, for thousands of years.
The WHO classifies Nipah as a priority pathogen. India regularly reports sporadic infections, particularly in the southern state of Kerala, regarded as one of the world’s highest-risk regions for Nipah.
As of December 2025, there have been 750 confirmed Nipah infections globally, with 415 deaths, according to the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations, which is funding a vaccine trial to help stop Nipah.