/ 18 October 2005

Libya rejects US call to save nurses

Libyan Foreign Minister Abdel Rahman Shalgam on Monday rejected a call by United States President George Bush for Tripoli to spare the lives of five Bulgarian nurses who were sentenced to death in May last year.

”This is a legal matter which cannot be influenced by any political decision,” the minister told the Arab satellite television network Al-Jazeera.

In Washington, where he was meeting with Bulgarian President Georgi Parvanov, Bush had said: ”The nurses ought to be freed. There should be no confusion in the Libyan government’s mind that those nurses ought to be, not only spared their life, but out of prison.

”We will continue to make that message perfectly clear.”

The five nurses and a Palestinian doctor are under death sentence in a Libyan jail and could face a firing squad. They were convicted last year, after six-and-a-half years in jail, of infecting children with the Aids virus at a hospital in Benghazi, in northern Libya.

Of the 380 children that were infected, 47 have died.

Two nurses and the doctor initially confessed to the charges, but later claimed police extracted their confessions with torture including beatings and electric shocks. — Sapa-AFP