Sun, Nov 22 2009

The 'Libyan six' a year later

Thu, Jul 24 2008 22:42 CET 143 Views

Exactly one year has passed since the release of the six Bulgarian medics on July 24 2007, after they had spent more than eight years in a Libyan prison.

The medics were arrested in 1999 and accused of deliberately infecting more than 400 children with HIV in a hospital in the Libyan town of Benghazi. Despite several reports of international experts, stating that the infection resulted from poor hygiene in the hospital, the medics were sentenced to death twice.

In July 2007, after the active interference of the international community, the sentence of the medics was commuted to life imprisonment. On July 24, under an agreement for prisoners' extradition, they returned to Bulgaria on the board of the French presidential aircraft, accompanied by France's then-first lady Cecilia Sarkozy. Bulgarian President Georgi Purvanov pardoned the medics at the very airport.

One year later, Bulgaria commemorated the day with a thanksgiving service in one of Sofia's major churches, St Sofia.

Meanwhile, the medics had announced a protest in front of the Cabinet building. Nevertheless, only their spokesperson and co-ordinator of their May 6th Foundation, Rossen Markov, appeared, Focus news agency said. The medics were too ashamed to appear, he said.

Markov told journalists that the medics continued to insist on meeting Prime Minister Sergei Stanishev. They wanted to do so because he was the only one to refuse meeting them, Markov said. It was a matter of attitude, he said.

Markov arranged seven little chairs in front of the Council of Ministers, with the sign "We accuse, we are waiting". The chairs were seven, because the actual number of the Bulgarian medics imprisoned in Libya was seven. One of them was released earlier.

Write comment

Name:Comment:

Generate new code
Send your comment

More in this category

EC suing Bulgaria for Sofia waste disposal failure

The European Commission is taking Bulgaria to court for delays in providing Sofia with adequate waste disposal facilities.

US ambassador-designate Warlick addresses senate confirmation hearing

James Warlick is the spouse of Mary Warlick, director of the office of Russian affairs at the US state department, who has been nominated to serve as ambassador to Serbia

Bulgaria declares flu epidemic at an end

Bulgaria’s Health Ministry announced on November 20 2009 that the flu epidemic declared two weeks earlier is at an end as rates of infection decline. The announcement coincides with reports of two deaths from A (H1N1) flu in Bulgaria.

Bulgarian prosecutors to investigate Dogan’s real estate deals

Acting on allegations by Democrats for a Strong Bulgaria leader Ivan Kostov, prosecutors and Government officials are to probe deals by which Movement for Rights and Freedoms leader Ahmed Dogan acquired various properties.

Sofia prosecutors charge Bulgaria’s former defence minister Nikolai Tsonev

Prosecutors allege that a deal agreed by the former defence minister caused losses of 12.9 million leva.