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Post Info TOPIC: Libya Lifts Death Sentences in Child H.I.V. Infections


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Libya Lifts Death Sentences in Child H.I.V. Infections


Libya on Tuesday commuted the death sentences of five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor convicted of having intentionally infected hundreds of Libyan children with H.I.V., the virus that causes AIDS.

Libya changed the medical workers sentences to life in prison after the families of the infected children each received $1 million. The decision could pave the way for a deal in which the Libyan government transfers the medical workers to Bulgaria, where it is probable they would be released. Bulgaria has consistently said the medical workers are not guilty.

The Bulgarian state institutions have already started the procedural steps needed for the transfer, said Dimiter Tzantcev, a Foreign Ministry spokesman. The formal request will be made tomorrow.

Libyas foreign minister, Abdel-Rahman Shalqam, told The Associated Press that his government would most likely grant the request, though he did not say when.

Issuing this decision automatically closes the legal case against them, Mr. Shalqam said. There is a legal cooperation agreement between Libya and Bulgaria, and we dont mind that the Bulgarian nurses and the Palestinian doctor benefit from it.

The decision by the Libyan High Judicial Council to commute the sentences was reported Tuesday by the countrys official news agency, JANA.

The convoluted case, in which the medical workers were twice ordered to die before a firing squad, began in February 1998 when the nurses arrived to take jobs at Al Fateh Childrens Hospital in Benghazi, Libyas second largest city. By August that year, children at the hospital began testing positive for H.I.V. Health authorities soon realized they had a major problem. Dozens of Bulgarian medical workers were arrested and a videotaped search of the apartment of one purported to turn up vials of H.I.V.-tainted blood. At least two of the nurses eventually confessed but said later that they had been forced to do so under torture.

The Libyan leader, Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, subsequently charged that the nurses had acted on the orders of the Central Intelligence Agency and Israels intelligence agency, the Mossad.

A Benghazi court eventually convicted the five nurses and doctor of deliberately injecting more than 400 children with the virus, though international AIDS experts including Luc Montagnier, the French virologist and a co-discoverer of H.I.V. concluded that the virus predated the nurses arrival and was probably spread by contaminated needles. More than 50 of the children have died.

The medical workers were sentenced to death in May 2004, but the Libyan Supreme Court ordered a retrial after an international uproar. That trial, too, ended with death sentences. Last week, the Supreme Court upheld the decision, leaving the High Council as the medical workers seemingly last hope.

Beyond the legal maneuverings, though, the case has long been regarded as one that centered on money for the affected families. Colonel Qaddafis son, Seif al-Islam, who has acted as point man on many of the countrys most difficult international negotiations, said repeatedly over the years that the medical workers would never be executed.

Under Libyas legal code, which follows Islamic law, the families had the right to grant clemency in return for blood money. They demanded $10 million for each child infected, the same amount that Libya agreed to pay each of the families of the 270 people killed in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, in 1988. Libya has accepted responsibility for the bombing.

Negotiations over the payments have dragged on for years, and the international community has spent millions of dollars per child for medical equipment and medical care. Finally, last week, each family received $1 million in a deal worked out between them and the younger Mr. Qaddafis charitable foundation. They then dropped their demands that the medical workers die.

It is not clear where the money paid to the families came from. The younger Mr. Qaddafi told Frances Le Figaro newspaper that Bulgaria, Slovakia, Croatia and the Czech Republic have forgiven some of Libyas cold-war-era debts, freeing the cash that was paid as compensation. But those governments have denied the claim, news agencies have reported.

There is no decision to alleviate debt, said Mr. Tzantcev. It has not been discussed.

Bulgaria has staunchly refused to pay compensation, arguing that it would be an admission that the medical workers were guilty.

But the country has committed to participate in an international fund set up in late 2005 to pay for the childrens medical care and to enhance Libyas abilities to fight H.I.V. Bulgaria has put no cash into the fund, Mr. Tzantcev said. He said all of the countrys contributions have in medical equipment and training.

The Bulgarian government hopes the medical workers will be transferred to its custody soon under a 1984 bilateral agreement with Libya that provides for citizens of one country convicted of crimes in the other to serve their sentences at home.

In June, Bulgaria granted the Palestinian doctor citizenship to make him eligible for transfer under the agreement. For us, Mr. Tzantcev said, the case will finally be closed when the Bulgarian nurses and the Palestinian doctor step onto Bulgarian soil.



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Wow those doctors should have to pay the million dollars and still get the death sentence.

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i believe that the death sentance is not needed in this case, but the nurses and doctor should not be able to get away with out punishment. they should be sentenced to life in prison for what they did to those poor children.

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If you think about those it doctors and nurses by puttind H.I.V on those kids are killing them cuz it will eventiually kill them so ya i think its fair they gt the death penalty

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Arturo Ferrand


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Ummmm I 100% believe that they deserve the death sentence. The fact that they were infecting so many innocent lives with a disease that would make their lives difficult and eventually cause death is so increadibly horrendous that I believe capital punishment is called for. Thats one of the most awful things Ive ever heard of.

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The LA times did a few stories on these cases about two years about the children who were intentionally infected by this doctor and these nurses. That story made me sick. These nurses and doctors have caused so much pain for these 400+ children, now adults, and they did it INTENTIONALLY. I cant believe how someone could do that on purpose. All of the families of these children have had to suffer so much because of these horrible people. Many have already died and its 100% these medical personal's fault. They really do deserve to die.

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veronica campitelli


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i think what these doctors and nurses did is absolutly horrible.. who iun their right mind would do such a thing? i feel horrible for those poor children and their families. although what these doctors and nurses did was wrong, i dont think they should die. i think someones life is the most precious gift a human being can have and to take that away from them is just wrong. however they should still get puished for what they did and never be allowed to work in the medical field again

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If they are guilty.. the normal death penalty inst enough. They should be tortured and kept alive for years. Everyday they should wake and face a horrible beating and be brought closer to deaths door. Nothing can be done to make-up for the crimes against HUMANITY that they have committed. I hope that their is a god.. and a hell.. and that these people go there.

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