Note: Please upgrade your Flash plug-in to view our enhanced content.

Deal Struck in Libya Foreign Medics Case

By KHALED EL-DEEB
The Associated Press
Tuesday, July 10, 2007; 8:07 PM

TRIPOLI, Libya -- A settlement has been reached to resolve the crisis over five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor sentenced to death in Libya for allegedly infecting more than 400 children with the AIDS virus, a foundation headed by the Libyan leader's son said Tuesday.

Foundation spokesman Salah Abdessalem did not say how the deal reached with families of the HIV-infected children would affect the case against the six foreign medical workers. The announcement came a day before Libya's Supreme Court was to rule on an appeal of their sentence, which caused an international outcry and a diplomatic crisis with Bulgaria and the European Union.


Left to right, Bulgarian nurses Snezhana Dimitrova, Cristiana Valcheva, Valya Chervenyashka, Palestinian doctor Ashraf Hajouj, and Bulgarian nurses Valentina Siropulo and Nasya Nenova await the verdict of their trial in a courtroom in Tripoli, Libya in this Dec. 19, 2006 file photo. A settlement has been reached in the case of the five nurses and  doctor who have been sentenced to death in Libya for infecting 400 children with the AIDS virus, the spokesman for the country's Gadhafi foundation said Tuesday, July 10, 2007. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis, file)
Left to right, Bulgarian nurses Snezhana Dimitrova, Cristiana Valcheva, Valya Chervenyashka, Palestinian doctor Ashraf Hajouj, and Bulgarian nurses Valentina Siropulo and Nasya Nenova await the verdict of their trial in a courtroom in Tripoli, Libya in this Dec. 19, 2006 file photo. A settlement has been reached in the case of the five nurses and doctor who have been sentenced to death in Libya for infecting 400 children with the AIDS virus, the spokesman for the country's Gadhafi foundation said Tuesday, July 10, 2007. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis, file) (Ben Curtis - AP)

"A settlement has been reached by the Gadhafi foundation and the League of the Libyan Children Infected with AIDS," Abdessalem said, referring to the group representing families of infected children. "This settlement is acceptable to all parties and will end the crisis," he told The Associated Press. "Details will be announced tomorrow."

The spokesman did not say whether the settlement involved financial compensation for the families, but there have been rumors for days in Libya that such an agreement was imminent.

Gadhafi had tried in the past to reach a deal by which Bulgaria would compensate the victims. But the Bulgarian government had rejected the proposal, saying it would imply the nurses' guilt.

Libyan officials have said the families' acceptance of a compensation settlement was key to resolving the legal deadlock. It would satisfy Islamic law and allow the death sentence to be withdrawn, they say.

Libya's ambassador to Britain, Mohammed al-Zaway, has said in the past that an agreement with the families would reflect positively on the case according to Islamic law. Often referred to as "blood money," compensation for death or suffering is a legal provision in the traditional Islamic code that is widespread in parts of the Middle East and North Africa.

The Gadhafi International Foundation for Charity Associations, which announced the settlement, is headed by Seif al Islam, son of longtime Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi. Seif al Islam has become an influential figure in Gadhafi's regime and an unofficial ambassador-at-large for it. He has been active for months in trying to resolve the case of the medics.

Earlier this year, he told a Bulgarian newspaper the six had received unjust verdicts and would not be executed.

Libya is under intense international pressure to free the six, who deny infecting the children. The case has become a sticking point in Libya's attempts to rebuild ties with the United States and Europe. President Bush called on Libya last month to free the medics.

A senior aide to Bush hand-delivered a letter from the president to Gadhafi on Monday that noted, among other things, the importance of resolving the crisis over the imprisoned medics, Gordon Johndroe, a spokesman for the National Security Council, said Tuesday.

The State Department could not confirm that an agreement had been reached but said Washington "would welcome" any resolution that would free the medics.


CONTINUED     1        >

© 2007 The Associated Press