AYOUB Posted May 9, 2004 Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor to death by firing squad for deliberately infecting some 400 children with HIV. Prosecutors demanded the death penalty, claiming the accused gave patients HIV in a bid to find an Aids cure. The medics, who worked at a children's hospital in the city of Benghazi, were arrested five years ago. Bulgaria's government, which had been lobbying for their release, condemned the "unfair and absurd" verdicts. Packed court The Libyan court found the six health workers guilty of having caused the death of 40 children and of infecting almost 400 others with HIV. Another Bulgarian, Dr Zdravko Georgiev, was initially reported to have received the death penalty but has in fact been given a four-year sentence and may be released soon, Bulgaria's ambassador to Libya said. Nine Libyans who worked at the same hospital were acquitted. The courtroom in Benghazi was surrounded by 100 armed police, Bulgaria's BTA news agency reported. Inside it was packed to capacity, with 15 foreign diplomats among those attending the session which was the culmination of a trial stopped and started several times over the years. At one point, the Libyan leader, Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, had accused the health workers of acting on orders from the CIA and the Israeli secret service, Mossad. Libya later rowed back on this allegation. The medics had always protested their innocence and said they had been tortured by the police, with daily beatings, sexual assault and electric shocks. They called expert witnesses, including one of the team which discovered the Aids virus, who said this was an epidemic caused by poor hygiene at the hospital, not by any international conspiracy. Relatives celebrate Western diplomats say the prosecutions arose because the authorities simply needed someone to blame for a tragedy which caused outrage in Libya. With Col Gaddafi recently moving to improve Libya's international standing, Bulgaria had hoped the court would be lenient. "I'm shocked by the verdicts...We're not going to accept them," said Bulgarian Justice Minister Anton Stankov. The government in Sofia is calling for a strong reaction from the international community. The European Union has already voiced its extreme concern. Bulgaria's parliamentary speaker, Ognyan Gerdzhikov, said he was confident the death sentences would not be carried out. "I expect Gaddafi to act like a humanist to win certain political credit, which he needs from public opinion," he told Bulgarian radio. But relatives of the infected children were celebrating. "The verdict is fair. What they did is a crime against humanity. They planted a bomb inside our children," Ramdane Ali Mohamed, whose sister died of Aids, told Reuters. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Reality Check Posted June 24, 2004 Is Qadaffi out of his f* mind? International conspiracy kulaha. Well, if they thought AIDS wouldn't happen to them because they are a muslim country, then they are WRONG. Maybe that will give em a clue that they need to equip their facilities against HIV. *shaking my head in disbelief* Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Liqaye Posted June 26, 2004 ^^^Before you jump out of your seat with all your "insights"....... :rolleyes: Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor to death by firing squad for deliberately infecting some 400 children with HIV. That is not beyond the realm of beleif, the apartheid goverment experminetd using HIV on Namibian and black south african soldiers under the guise of giving treatment. Dr.Basoon aka Dr.Death a reasercher on chemical and biological weapons said as much at his trail. I dont know anything about this particular case, but that this has happened before is adocumented fact and if it were to happen again, the tests would probably be run a bunch of " sand ni****rs " than any one else. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites