SOFIA, Bulgaria - Death sentences handed down in Libya for five Bulgarian
nurses accused of deliberately infecting 400 children with HIV triggered outrage
Wednesday in Bulgaria, where the rulings were described as "a political farce"
and a "mockery of justice."
People protest behind a poster which reads 'The World
watching You God also', during a protest in front of the Libyan embassy in
the Bulgarian capital Sofia, Tuesday, Dec. 19, 2006. [AP]
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A court in Tripoli on Tuesday
convicted the nurses and a Palestinian doctor and sentenced them to death,
despite scientific evidence the youngsters had the virus before the medical
workers arrived in Libya.
"The Libyan 'court' humbly carried out the orders of one of the longest
serving dictators in the world," wrote the independent Monitor daily, which also
carried the headline: "Deadly Christmas present from (Libyan leader Moammar)
Gadhafi."
Some columnists called for economic sanctions or even breaking off diplomatic
relations with the north African country.
"The solution is in a sharp, quick and open attack ... as a fully fledged EU
member, Bulgaria should demand a European economic and diplomatic blockade on
Libya," said one of the most popular dailies. Bulgaria will join the EU on Jan.
1.
The largest trade union in Bulgaria urged citizens working in Libya to leave
the country. "Their labor and human rights will find no protection there," the
union said in a statement.
Doctors and nurses from hospitals across the country protested against the
sentences, while civic groups organized demonstrations and appealed for the
nurses' immediate release.
The six have been in jail since 1999 on charges that they intentionally
spread the HIV virus to more than 400 children at a hospital in the city of
Benghazi during a botched experiment to find a cure for AIDS. Fifty of the
children died.
Bulgaria and European officials have blamed the infections on unhygienic
practices at the hospital, and accuse Libya of making the accused scapegoats to
cover up poor conditions.
Libyan investigators told the court that infections were limited to the part
of the hospital where the Bulgarian nurses had worked.
"The whole trial was a giant political farce ... It was a mockery of justice,
falsified and manipulated," said Velislava Dareva, a journalist who heads a
nongovernment association campaigning for the nurses' release.
"These death sentences are the cover for Libyan authorities to hide their
guilt and their responsibility for the humanitarian disaster in Libya, where
more than 100,000 people now live with AIDS."
Some commentators and editors called on Bulgaria's allies - the EU and
the US - to increase the pressure on Tripoli to free the health workers.
"Libya needs a tool for influence, but not just over Bulgaria ... it targets
mainly the European community and the U.S.," the independent Dnevnik daily wrote
in an editorial. "If Gadhafi wants something from the West, it's up to the West
to give him an adequate answer.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said after Tuesday's ruling the United
States was "very disappointed with the outcome" and urged the medical workers be
freed and "allowed to go home at the earliest possible date."
The European Union said it was "shocked" by the verdict. Spokesman Johannes
Laitenberger said the EU had not yet decided to take steps against Libya while
the ruling is appealed - but he "did not rule anything
out."