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U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
News Briefs
AIDS Trial of Bulgarians in Libya Adjourned Again
July 10, 2003 The trial of six Bulgarians and a Palestinian, imprisoned for
almost three years on charges of spreading AIDS through tainted
blood products in Libya, reopened but was adjourned again
indefinitely Tuesday, court sources said. No other details were
given of the trial or Tuesday's hearing, which had recommenced
after an earlier ten-month adjournment. Six Bulgarians -- five
nurses and one doctor -- along with a Palestinian doctor were
arrested in 1998 on charges of infecting 393 Libyan children with
HIV at a hospital in Benghazi, east of Tripoli, where they
worked. The case was thrown out for lack of evidence when it
first went to court in 2002, but Benghazi judicial authorities
decided in August to reopen the case before a criminal court. If
found guilty, the medics face the death penalty. The Bulgarians
are also accused of illegally distilling alcohol, having sex
outside of marriage, and trading currency on the black market.
The seven have denied all charges against them. Two nurses and
the Palestinian doctor have said in court their confessions to
police were made under duress.
Excerpted from:Back to other CDC news for July 10, 2003 Agence France Presse 07.08.03 This article was provided by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is a part of the publication CDC HIV/Hepatitis/STD/TB Prevention News Update. |