UPDATE June 15, 2005
Wednesday, 15 June, 2005: The families of Libyan children with HIV insisted on implementing death sentences against five Bulgarian nurses convicted of infecting them. The families said in a statement released Tuesday the sentences served by a court in
Death Sentence For Docs In
A Libyan court has condemned
six Bulgarian medics to death by firing squad for infecting patients with the
HIV virus.
The head of the five-judge panel that heard the case, Fadallah
el-Sherif, said Thursday: "The court is
sentencing the defendants No. 1-6 to death by firing
squad."
Under Libyan law, people to condemned to death
automatically have the right to appeal.
Prosecutors had demanded death sentences, accusing the Bulgarians of
intentionally infecting more than 400 children with HIV-contaminated blood as
part of an experiment to find a cure for AIDS. Twenty-three of the children
reportedly have since died of AIDS.
Initially
All six had pleaded not guilty.
Libyan police arrested the six in February 1999. They were in prison until
September 2002, when a high tribunal in the Libyan capital,
Dr. Luc Montagnier, the French co-discoverer of the AIDS
virus, said poor hygiene at the
But a commission of court-appointed Libyan doctors rejected the Western
expert's testimony and said the Bulgarians willfully infected the children with
the virus through blood transfusions.
The speaker of
The European Union, Amnesty International and other organizations have
criticized the proceedings, and Bulgarian Foreign Minister Solomon Pasi claims the medics were severely tortured.
The suspects have said they were jolted with electricity, beaten with sticks
and repeatedly jumped on while strapped to their beds. Two of the women said
they were raped.
The trial before the criminal court in
By Khaled El-Deeb İMMIV The Associated Press.
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