Yes here in the US as well. Most cases parent will say I forgot the baby was in the vehicle. Also get the idiot parent go into the store to shop for hours without the infant or toddler. When there is a death there is serious consequences.
I kind of skipped over this business but this reminds me of a thing that happened to me 20 years ago. I was driving down a four-lane divided Boulevard in town with the clear road ahead of me.
Suddenly this beat-up Chevy Malibu backs off the curb coming towards me in reverse.
It's swings widely as the wheels go left, and it turns broadside across all four lanes of traffic as it backs across the center median.
As I drive past, it is still in reverse and going in a big circle, heading for the median again. As I passed the car on the right I see there is no driver. Four lanes of traffic Screech to a halt.
This was my opportunity to be a hero so I jammed my Plymouth Volare up over the curb and parked it. Then, I stepped out into the road, stuck my arm in through the window of this moving car, ran it back up onto the median and jammed it in park.
I turned back to my Plymouth parked illegally on the curb, and then I see this gal coming towards me at a trot with a big basket of laundry. She's screaming something and I realize it is about her baby. She drops her basket on the median yanks open the door and there is a two-year-old cowering on the back floor.
I don't know why that kid wasn't screaming, but he never made a sound until his mom grabbed him.
Now maybe she left the car running in park & the kid pulled on the shifter trying to look out the window.
but those old Malibus used to break the motor mounts and if the engine was running roughly at idle that it could eventually shift itself. This is how a Model Tees used to drop into gear and pin their owners against the garage wall.
Most later model cars all went to a cable shifter. That solid linkage was a safety hazard, that combined with weak motor mounts, caused a number of these incidents.