Libya Proposes Plan To Release Bulgarian Nurses

The defendants leaving court in Tripoli in December 2006 (epa) January 29, 2007 -- The son of Libyan President Muammar Qaddafi says Libya won't execute five Bulgarian nurses who were sentenced to death in Tripoli for allegedly spreading the HIV virus to children.

Seif al-Islam told the Bulgarian newspaper "24 Hours" today that the nurses' trial was "unfair" and that he has proposed a plan to free the nurses in exchange for financial compensation to the victims' families.


Al-Islam said he had discussed the plan with Bulgarian and EU officials. He gave no other details.


The nurses and a Palestinian doctor were sentenced in December for having infected 426 children at a Libyan hospital with blood tainted by the HIV virus, which causes AIDS. More than 50 of the children have died.


EU and Bulgarian officials have claimed the defendants are innocent and called for their release.


(AFP, Reuters)

RFE/RL Reports On AIDS

RFE/RL Reports On AIDS

An HIV-positive Ukrainian woman and her daughter (epa)

FACES OF THE EPIDEMIC: HIV-infection rates continue to soar in many parts of RFE/RL's broadcast region, from Ukraine and Russia to Central Asia. RFE/RL frequently reports on the problems associated with the pandemic and efforts to combat them.


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