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Benghazi epidemic
http://www.bta.bg/
Dr DANAIL BESHKOV,
Director of the National AIDS Laboratory, works in close cooperation
with Bisanti. He is in charge of the medical aspects of the case,
studies similar cases in other countries and conducts the correspondence
with foreign experts Frenchman Luc Montaigner and Geneva-based
virologist Luc Perrin.
According to Beshkov, research done by Perrin and Montaigner
corroborates the theory that the HIV epidemic in Benghazi was the result
of an in-hospital infection.
The experts would like to see more research being done to determine the
causes for the epidemic and to take measures to prevent such cases in
the future.
Citing expert opinions, Beshkov thinks that the influx of citizens of
other African countries is among the factors that facilitated the spread
of AIDS. Beshkov quoted data according to which 36 per cent of the
population of Botswana and 20 per cent of the population of South Africa
are HIV positive.
Beshkov elaborates that in-hospital infections and in particular those
caused by blood-transmitted agents such as microbes and viruses have
been recorded as far back as the early 20th century when the mass use of
syringes started. The first recorded case of an in-hospital infection
dates to the year 1917 when in England during the treatment of soldiers
for syphilis they were infected with malaria. This is the first
documented epidemiological outbreak caused by an in-hospital infection.
The first recorded case of an AIDS epidemic caused by an in-hospital
infection occurred at the pediatric hospital in the town of Elisa in the
Kalmyk Republic. One hundred children were infected after the reuse of
syringes.
Some 2,000 children from maternity homes, pediatric hospitals and
nursery schools in Romania were infected in 1990 with AIDS due to use of
infected blood for transfusions and the reuse of syringes. Beshkov noted
other cases of infection that affected fewer people. In 1992, a dentist
in Florida infected five of his patients with instruments that were not
sterilized properly. A case of AIDS infection was reported in 1993 at a
private clinic in Australia. Two cases of AIDS infection were reported
in 1999 in Denmark and France which were again the result of in-hospital
infections caused by the reuse of instruments and improper
sterilization. These cases show that even in the industrialized
countries there are no guarantees that an in-hospital infection will not
break out.
There is also information on in-hospital AIDS infections in Africa but
these cases are not well documented, Beshkov said. The case in Libya is
not the first one and will not be the last, he thinks. Poor infection
control standards, shortage of consumables and the medical staff’s
insufficient knowledge of the mechanism for the transmission of
infections are among the main factors for the epidemics.
Ten years after the first case of mass AIDS infection, the issue remains
topical for the global medical community, Beshkov said. A lot has been
done in the field of prophylaxis but there are still some unresolved
problems, he said, noting that 16,000 people around the world are
infected with AIDS every day.
The main factors for the transmission of infectious diseases through
syringes are the improper sterilization and reuse. Such practices
facilitate the transmission of hepatitis B and C, AIDS, ebola, lasa and
malaria. Between 20 and 80 per cent of new cases of hepatitis B are the
result of syringe-transmitted infection. Almost all cases of hepatitis C
are the result of reuse of syringe needles. In the Western World,
hepatitis C is referred to as the disease of drug addicts since 70-90
per cent of them are infected.
Experts consider in-hospital infections with blood-transmitted agents to
be the main problem of hospital care in countries with limited financial
resources. On the basis of representative research, WHO has concluded
that every year in developing countries between 8 and 16 million
people contract hepatitis B, 2.3-4.7 million contract hepatitis C and
80,000-160,000 are infected with AIDS.
Prof. LUC
MONTAIGNER
of the Institut Pasteur in Paris takes credit for the first publication
in world medical literature on the discovery of the human
immunodeficiency virus in 1983. The 67-years-old professor holds the
Prix Rosen for cancer research, the Gallien Prize, the Heineken Prize
for Medicine, the Lasker Prize and a number of other international
honours. He is Commander of the Legion d’Honneur.. Montaigner visited
Libya together with Prof. Stephane Blanche, in whose Paris clinic part
of the Libyan children were tested. Prof. Montaigner has co-founded the
New York-based World Foundation for AIDS Research.
The other prominent virologist contacted by lawyer Bisanti is
LUC PERRIN of Switzerland. He
works at the Geneva University Hospital and is one of the greatest
living specialists in the field of retroviruses.
PROF. VITTORIO COLIZZI is one of
the most eminent researchers of HIV/AIDS in Europe. He heads the
Laboratory of Immunochemical and Molecular Pathology with the Biology
Department of Tor Vergata University in Rome, Italy. Together with his
French counterpart Prof. Luc Montagnier, in 2002 he begins working on a
report about how and when nearly 400 Libyan children in the Benghazi
chidlern's hospital came to be infected with the AIDS visrus. The final
report drawn by the two scholars is submitted to the Libyan authorities,
who have commissioned it, in April 2003. By the middle of 2003, Colizzi
has visited Libya three times. He explores the modifications of HIV
isolated from the organisms of Libyan children in three hospitals - in
Rome, Geneva, and France. The general conclusion is that all
modifications bear a close similarity and that they even have a common
origin.
According to Colizzi, the AIDS infection in the Benghazi hospital is of
an iatric character. Its source is a child who was a HIV carrier but was
hospitalized for the treatment of another disease.
Dr PAOLO LUSSO, head of and AIDS
testing department at the San Raffaele Hospital in Milan, and
Dr PAOLA NASCA, member of the
National Anti-AIDS League, came to the limelight in a major article
about the treatment of some 200 HIV-infected Libyan children in clinics
in Rome and Milan, which appeared in the Italian magazine Diario on
February 2, 2001. The two Italian doctors told the magazine that the
AIDS epidemic at the Benghazi children’s hospital was most probably
caused by multiple use of syringes and non-sterile instruments.
Professor GEORGE JOFFE is an
expert at the Center for International Studies at Cambridge, the UK. He
specializes in the problems of Northern Africa and the Middle East and
is known for his commentaries and scientific theses on the problems of
terrorism and international politics.
In an interview for BBC Professor Joffe suggests that the decisions of
the court in Benghazi on Case 213/2002 indicate that the Libyan
authorities probably realize that the Bulgarian medical professionals
are not responsible for the outbreak of AIDS in Libya in 1997-1998.
INTERNATIONAL OBSERVERS
At the invitation of Bulgarian members of the International Association
of Democratic Lawyers, two international observers attended several of
the hearings of the People’s Court in Tripoli: Mohammad Baqar of
Tunisia, Secretary General of the Mediterranean Bar Association, and
Zubeida Amrani of Algeria, Secretary General of the Association of Arab
Jurists. The presence of international observers sets a precedence in
Libyan administration of justice. The two observers found that the trial
was conducted according to the law and that the Bulgarians were not
subjected to harsher treatment on account of being foreigners. Baqar and
Amrani are convinced that the Bulgarians will not be convicted because
there is no sufficient incriminating evidence.
http://www.bta.bg/site/libya/en/09hearings2002.htm
At its first
hearing on July 8, 2003 the Criminal Court in Benghazi proceeds with the
AIDS infection case.
The court schedules another hearing for August 4, also in Benghazi and
dismisses a request by defence lawyer Plamen Yalnuzov to release the
defendants on the recognizance of the Bulgarian Government as certified
in a letter by the Bulgarian Embassy in Tripoli.
During the one-hour session the court hears statements by the defence
lawyers of the Bulgarians and the other defendants (one Palestinian and
nine Libyans).
Yalnuzov requests that a report by prominent AIDS experts Luc Montagnier
and Vittorio Colizzi be admitted in evidence. Yalnuzov argues that a
profound scientific examination is essential for the court to establish
the truth about the tragedy, which caused suffering to the infected
children and their families as well as to the Bulgarian defendants who
"have been subject to arbitrary and violent treatment." He urges the
court to release the Bulgarian defendants on the recognizance of the
Bulgarian authorities which undertake to ensure that the defendants will
appear in court during the trial.
The two prosecutors in the case insist that the Bulgarians' remand in
custody be continued, and the court grants their request.
A lawyer of the parents of one of the infected children lodges a
compensation claim for 15 million Libyan dinars. The claim is handed
over to the lawyers of the defendants.
During the hearing, tight security measures are in place in the city
outskirts. Many police officers with submachine guns and pistols guard
the venue of the hearing near the Al-Kawafiyah Prison.
Only several relatives of some of the infected children are admitted in
the court room. The six Bulgarian defendants sit behind bars in a
partitioned section of the room. Sitting in the back rows are about a
dozen Libyans whom an Arraignment Chamber in Benghazi found responsible
for duress committed against the Bulgarians during the preliminary
investigation.
Italy's Consul General in Benghazi, Giovanni Pirello, attends the
hearing as an observer and as representative both of his country and the
European Union, as Italy is holding the rotating Presidency of the
Union.
In front of the building where the hearing is held, members of the
committee of relatives of infected children meet with Bulgarian
journalists. In a message to the Bulgarian people they say they wish to
learn the truth about the case, regardless of who caused the infection.
August 4, 2003. At its second
hearing on August 4, the criminal court in Benghazi decides to admit
AIDS experts Prof. Luc Montagnier and Prof. Vittorio Colizzi as
witnesses in Case No. 213/2002. The decision is made in response to the
explicit request of Plamen Yalnuzov, the Bulgarian lawyer of the
defendants.
The court decides to give the two scientists a hearing on September 3,
when its next hearing will be held.
At this second hearing of Case No. 213/2002, Yalnuzov submits in writing
six motions. One motion is to call Professors Luc Montagnier and
Vittorio Colizzi, as witnesses. He also moves that a report by Abu Zayd
Umar Durda, made in connection with the causes of the AIDS epidemic in
Libya and presented to the UN Security Council, be admitted in evidence.
The Durda report blames the bad state of the Libyan health care system
on the UN embargo imposed against Libya in 1992.
Another one of Yalnuzov's motions is that the court admit in evidence
the last issue of the "La" magazine, which in 1998 conducted an
investigation into the causes of the AIDS epidemic at the Al Fatah
children's hospital in Benghazi and was suppressed in consequence.
Yalnuzov hands the panel of judges a copy of the "La" last issue.
Yalnuzov also moves that the defendants' lawyers be given access to the
protocol on the results of the analysis of five banks containing plasma
protein that were seized from the home of one of the nurses charged in
the case, Kristiyana Vulcheva.
The Bulgarian medical workers' lawyer insists for an investigation in
connection with the place of detainment of the six Bulgarians between
June 1999 and February 2002, the period of the preliminary
investigation. According to Yalnuzov, the place where the Bulgarians
were detained during that period is in contradiction with the Libyan
law.
Once again Yalnuzov insists on changing the measure of restraint applied
to the Bulgarians - "remand in custody", into a milder one.
Nine Libyan nationals - officers of the security services, appear at the
hearing held by the criminal court. A year ago, issuing a ruling in
connection with the testimony of the Bulgarian medics that they were
tortured during the preliminary investigation, the Arraignment Chamber
in benghazi determined that the officers should be held liable for what
they did.
The Libyan lawyer of the Bulgarian defendants, Osman Bizanti, is
represented by his assistant Hanan Alaueti. The hearing lasts for more
than an hour and is attended by Italian Consul Giovanni Pirello and, for
the first time, by Fatma al-Masri, Human Rights Department Coordinator
at the Qaddafi International Foundation for Charity Associations, as
observers.
The Bulgarian medics' defence lawyers confirm that the panel on Case No.
213/2002 is composed of judges from Derma, a town neighboring Benghazi.
The reason is that several judges from Tripoli and Benghazi refused to
take on the case due to public sentiments in the two cities.
The court panel is constituted following a ten-month break in the court
proceedings involved in the case.
http://www.aegis.com/NEWS/AFP/2003/AF030733.html
Libya-Bulgaria-trial: AIDS trial of Bulgarians in Libya adjourned again
Agence France-Presse - July 8, 2003
TRIPOLI, July 8 (AFP) - The trial of six Bulgarians and a Palestinian
accused of spreading an AIDS epidemic in Libya reopened but was
adjourned again indefinitely Tuesday, court sources said.
No
other details were given of the trial on Tuesday's hearing in Benghazi,
east of Tripoli, which had recommenced following an earlier ten-month
adjournment.
Six Bulgarians -- five nurses and one doctor -- along with a Palestinian
doctor, worked at a hospital in Benghazi when they were arrested in 1998
on charges of infecting 393 Libyan children with the HIV virus that
causes AIDS, through tainted blood products.
The case was thrown out for lack of evidence when it first went to a
special court in 2002, but the prosecution refiled the charges and
Benghazi judicial authorities decided in August to reopen the case
before a criminal court.
AIDS-related diseases have already killed at least 23 of the children at
the Al-Fateh children's hospital.
The medics have been in prison for almost three years. They face the
death sentence if found guilty, in a case which has aroused strong
feelings in Bulgaria and a slump in relations between Sofia and Tripoli.
The Bulgarians were also accused of illegally distilling alcohol, having
sex outside marriage and trading currency on the black market.
The seven have denied all the charges against them, while two nurses and
the Palestinian doctor have said in court that confessions they made to
police were made under duress.
030708
AF030733
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28/9/2001: Libya:
detention, torture and risk of an unfair trial of five Bulgarian
nurses and one doctor, one Palestinian and 9 Libyans |
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http://www.omct.org/displaydocument.asp?DocType=Appeal&Index=1138&La
Case LBY 280901
Arbitrary Arrest and Detention/Torture/Fair Trial
The International Secretariat of OMCT requests your URGENT
intervention in the following situation in Libya.
Brief description of the situation:
The International Secretariat of OMCT has been informed by the
Assistance Centre for Torture Victims (ACET) and the International
Rehabilitation Council for Torture Victims (IRCT), both of whom
are members of the OMCT network, as well as the Bulgarian Helsinki
Committee and Greek Helsinki Monitor, of the detention, torture
and risk of an unfair trial of five Bulgarian nurses and one
doctor, one Palestinian and 9 Libyans in Libya. The trial has been
postponed 14 times by the judge, reportedly upon requests from the
defence, most recently on September 22nd, at which time a verdict
was expected. The verdict is now expected to be announced when the
court next convenes, on December 22nd.
According to the information received, on February 9th, 1999, over
seventy health professionals from Bulgaria (23 persons), Egypt,
Hungary, the Philippines and Poland were arrested in Benghazi,
Libya, following an investigation into an HIV virus epidemic in
the Al-Fateh Pediatric Hospital in Benghazi, in which 393 children
were reportedly infected. At least 23 of these children have
reportedly died since then. All of the persons that were arrested
were released the next day, notably, it is thought, due to the
active reaction and operations of their embassy representatives,
except the 23 Bulgarian detainees. All but five of these were
released one week later. The five persons who remained in custody
were all female nurses, including: Christiana Vulcheva, Nassya
Nenova, Valenitina Siropulo, Valya Chervenyashka, Snejana
Dimitrova. Another Bulgarian national, Dr. Zdavko Georgiev,
Christina Vulcheva’s husband, was arrested on February 9th, 1999,
when he went to the police station where his wife was being
detained, and has been detained and accused along with the other
five persons, even though he did not work at the same hospital.
According to the information received, on February 7th, 2000 a
Tripoli prosecutor signed a 1,600-page indictment against the six
Bulgarians, nine Libyans and one Palestinian, charging them with
undermining and attacking the security of the Libyan State by
intentionally spreading the HIV virus through contaminated blood.
The specific charges include: intentional killing with a lethal
substance (Article 371 of the Libyan Criminal Code), random
killing with the aim of attacking the security of the State
(Article 202 of the Libyan Criminal Code) and causing an epidemic
through spreading harmful microbes leading to the death of persons
(Article 305 of the Libyan Criminal Code). If convicted, the
defendants may face the death penalty. Other charges have been
brought against the Bulgarians and Palestinian defendants for
violating the norms relating to Islam. Charges of this type,
leveled against the Bulgarian female nurses, include extramarital
sexual activity and the production and possession of alcohol. The
Palestinian defendant faces a charge of exchanging money through
the black market. The Libyan nationals in the case have been
charged with numerous counts of negligence in their capacity as
health officials, as well as abuse of authority.
Since their arrest on 9 February 1999 the accused have remained in
custody. At first they were detained for about 10 months without
having access to their families. They were allowed access to a
defence lawyer only after trail proceedings had begun. In mid-May
2000 the Libyan defence lawyer for the Bulgarian defendants, Osman
Bizanti, who was hired by the Bulgarian Embassy, told the media
that he had only met his clients on two occasions.
All of the defendants have complained that during the initial
stage of detention they have been subjected to torture and inhuman
treatment. The forms of torture to which they have been subjected
typically include: electrocution, beating with electrical wire,
being kept naked and crucified for lengthy periods of time, being
beaten on the soles of the feet, being drugged, the use of fire
and ice-cold showers, being held in over-crowded cells, being
blinded by bright lights and being intimidated and bitten by
police dogs. At first the accused told Mr. Hristo Danov, the
Bulgarian president's envoy, who visited them in the prison in
April 2000, that during the investigation they were tortured.
Before the court hearing on 12 May 2001 Mrs. Krisrtina Vulcheva
told the Bulgarian “24 hours” newspaper correspondent that all the
detainees were subjected to systematic torture during the first
three months after their arrest. Later, the information was
confirmed by Mr. Emil Manolov, Bulgaria's consul general in
Tripoli, who visited the detainees on 31 May 2001 for the first
time in three months.
Two of the accused - Mrs. Kristina Vulcheva and Mrs. Nassya Nenova,
- who seemed to have suffered most, raised their complaints of
torture during the court hearing on 2 June 2001, while being
questioned as to confessions made during the investigation. Both
accused withdrew their testimonies with the explanation that they
were forced into confessing about offences they had not committed
through the use of torture. Mrs. Vulcheva said that during the
investigation she was subjected at least ten times to electric
shocks. She was undressed and beaten with an electric cable. Then
two men held her under arms and made her run while her legs was
still paralyzed by the electricity. For nine months after the
torture Mrs. Vulcheva was not able to menstruate. This allegation
of torture was later confirmed by Mrs. Vulcheva's mother, Zorka
Anachkova. She visited her daughter in the prison after the last
court hearing on 17 June 2001. Mrs. Anachkova told the Bulgarian "Trud"
newspaper that her daughter had told her that she was being
tortured.
At the court hearing on 2 June 2001 Mrs. Nenova told the court
that she was systematically tortured and subjected to electric
shocks during detention. She later attempted to commit suicide
when she heard that Major Djuma, who conducted the torture, was
returning to the prison to take over the investigation. She also
recounted that before and after the court hearings all the
detainees were always taken to the investigation's office where
investigators exerted pressure upon them. Mrs. Nenova allegations
were confirmed in mid-June 2000 by Mrs. Nadya Dervisheva, a
Bulgarian nurse who was arrested with the accused but later
released without being prosecuted. She told the Bulgarian Helsinki
Committee that Nassya Nenova had told her during a visit she made
to the prison, that she had been tortured. Mrs. Dervisheva
observed that, due to her mistreatment in prison, Nassya Nenova
needed prison staff to help her walk. On 13 July 2001 Dr. Ivan
Nenov, Nassya Nenova’s husband, visited his wife in prison. He
told the Bulgarian newspaper “24 hours” that Mrs. Nenova had told
him that she was beaten with a cable on her hands and feet. As a
result she could not walk for one week. A month later she was
reportedly subjected to electric shocks and threatened with
infection with HIV if she did not make confessions.
The Palestinian detainee was allowed to be visited by his family
in early 2000. They later reported that they observed black marks
on his hands. He told them he had been subjected to electric
shocks.
At the court hearing on 16 June 2001, Bulgarian attorney Sheitanov
requested that the Court order a forensic expertise to determine
whether the detainees had been tortured. He also gave a list of
the people who had allegedly conducted torture, but the court
ignored the request. The alleged perpetrators include: Major Djuma,
General Harb Durbal, Colonel Dzuma Misheri, Selim Druma, Mohammed
Harari, Dzuma Mlatem, Usama Uidad, Abdul Mazhid (a chemist), Idris
(an interpreter) and a man referred to only as Mustafa.
The defence lawyers for the Bulgarian defendants requested the
court to summon as witnesses Dr. Luc Montagnier from France and
Dr. Luc Rerrin from Switzerland, who are prominent HIV
researchers, to appear before it as medical experts. The two
professors have already check-ups on some of the Libyan children
and found that most of them were also infected with different
types of hepatitis B and C, indicating that there were multiple
sources of infection in the Benghazi hospital. The court refused
to grant the request.
Under Libyan law, any of the suspects who confess will be
sentenced to death. This is in violation of the rule of
inadmissibility of statements extracted under torture. Article 15
of the Convention against Torture states: "Each State Party shall
ensure that any statement which is established to have been made
as a result of torture shall not be invoked as evidence in any
proceedings, except against a person accused of torture as
evidence that the statement was made." Furthermore, other evidence
presented by the prosecution was collected in illegal ways, for
example during searches of the defendants’ houses while they were
not present, and can therefore also not be considered during the
trial.
The defendants are being tried by the People's Court, which OMCT
believes is not qualified to deliver a fair trial, as its members
are not explicitly required to be members of the judiciary or
trained lawyers and are elected by the General People's Congress
on a periodic basis. These two particularities of the court appear
to be inconsistent with the Basic Principles on the Independence
of the Judiciary adopted by the 7th UN Congress on the prevention
of Crime and the treatment of Officers, in September 1985 and
approved by the 40th Session of the UN General Assembly in
November 1985.
OMCT is gravely concerned for the physical and psychological
integrity of the afore-mentioned detainees, given that they have
been repeatedly tortured and subjected to ill-treatment,
reportedly resulting in damage to their health. OMCT fears that
they will continue to be subjected to ill-treatment until the
verdict is announced, and fears that they may be sentenced to
death at that time. OMCT is gravely concerned about the Libyan
authorities’ use of arbitrary arrests, incommunicado detentions,
torture and ill-treatment, as well as widespread violations of
these persons’ procedural rights and right to a fair trial.
Action requested:
i. take all necessary measures to guarantee the prisoners’
physical and psychological integrity;
ii. order their immediate release in the absence of valid legal
charges or, if such charges exist, bring them before an impartial,
independent and competent tribunal and guarantee their procedural
rights at all times;
iii. ensure the right of those detained to be allowed to meet with
their lawyers and family;
iv. intervene with the appropriate authorities in order to secure
that the adequate medical assistance is provided as a matter of
urgency to the detainees;
v. order a thorough and impartial investigation into the
circumstances of these arrests an ill-treatment and torture during
the prisoners detention, in order to identify those responsible,
bring them to trial and apply the penal, civil and/or
administrative sanctions as provided by law;
vi. guarantee the respect of human rights and the fundamental
freedoms throughout the country in accordance with national laws
and international human rights standards.
Addresses:
· Colonel Mu'ammar al-Kaddafi, Leader of the Revolution, Office of
the Leader of the Revolution, Tripoli, Great Socialist People's
Libyan Arab Jamahiriya. Fax : + 218 21 333 01 85
· Imbarak Abdalla El Shamek, Prime Minister, Secretary of the
General People's Committee Tripoli, Great Socialist People's
Libyan Arab Jamahiriya. Fax : + 218 54 60 017
· Mohammed Mohammed Belgassem al-Zuia, Minister of Justice and
General Security, Office of the Minister of Justice and General
Security, Tripoli, Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya.
Fax : + 218 21 444 16 74
· The General People's Congress (Human Rights section). Fax : +
218 21 361 39 07
Please also write to the Diplomatic Representatives of Libya in
your country.
Geneva, September 28th, 2001
Kindly inform us of any action undertaken quoting the code of this
appeal in your reply.
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