EU Lends Hand in Bulgarian Nurses Case
25 01 2007 Sofia
has new allies over its Libya
captives but is divided about how best to use their aid.
By Albena
Shkodrova in Sofia
(Balkan Insight, 25 Jan 07)
Membership of the European
Union has boosted Sofia’s
hand in defending five Bulgarian nurses, who have been sentenced to death by a
Libyan court for allegedly infecting hundreds of children with HIV.
What had been a national
campaign against the trial and sentences has crossed the country’s borders,
with Bulgaria
gaining unprecedented support from EU institutions and member countries over
the case in the past few days.
On January 18, the European
parliament demanded that the death sentences be overturned. And scores of EU
politicians, including Italian prime minister Romano Prodi and EU commissioner
for external relations Benita Ferrero-Waldner, this week issued strongly-worded
statements against the court’s procedures and expressions of support for the
nurses.
Among non-governmental organisations that have got involved in the
campaign against the trial, the Association of Belgian Nurses has collected
over 47,000 signatures demanding their colleagues’ immediate release.
But experts warn that now Bulgaria faces
a challenge in finding the best way to use its newly acquired influence.
The trial of the
nurses started eight years ago, while hundreds of Bulgarian medics were still
working in the country under agreements reached in the Cold War.
In February 1999,
police arrested 19 Bulgarian medics in connection to an epidemic of HIV/AIDS in
a Benghazi
children’s hospital.
They later
released 13 of them but five nurses, Christiana Vulcheva, Nasya Nenova,
Snezhana Dimirtova, Valentina Siropulo and Valya Chervenyashka, and Dr Zdravko
Georgiev were charged with deliberately infecting 393 children with HIV and
with plotting against Libya’s
national security. Both crimes carry the death penalty under Libyan law.
The accused
pleaded not guilty and alleged they had undergone torture to make them confess.
In 2003, Luc Montagnier, the French physician who first detected the HIV virus,
researched the case and denounced the charges, testifying in court that the
epidemic broke out a year before the Bulgarians arrived in Libya.
Nevertheless, in
May 2004 the court sentenced the five nurses to death. Dr Georgiev was
acquitted but has not been permitted to leave Libya.
Libya’s
Supreme Court overturned the sentences in December 2005 and ordered a retrial,
but in December 2006 a lower court pronounced the same sentences for a second
time.
The international
community has given the trial some attention ever since September 2001. The EU
countries and the United States
have all been involved in bilateral negotiations with Libya over the
issue, objecting to some of the court procedures and the length of the trial.
But accession to
the EU has significantly increased Bulgaria’s ability to tap fresh
political support.
While this raises
hopes and enthusiasm, some warn it will be far from easy to use this new
momentum, for which Bulgaria
lacks a strategy.
One possible
danger is that political pressure on Tripoli
will be ramped up while the court is still sitting.
The EU’s vigour
over the case has already angered Libyan politicians. This week, Foreign
Minister Abdel Rahman Mohammad Shalkam said he was seeking the support of
regional and international organisations against what he called the EU’s
“biased” stance on the trial. On January 23, the General People’s Congress
echoed the minister’s reaction.
European
membership “raises Bulgaria’s
authority and also engages the EU institutions to a much greater extent”, the
Bulgarian justice minister, Georgi Petkanov, told Balkan Insight.
Experts point to
the increased public support throughout the EU that the nurses’ plight is
attracting. “As a member of the EU, Bulgaria is a thousand times
stronger because its problems become problems of all the European citizens,”
said Vladimir Chukov, an Arab specialist and prominent commentator on the
trial.
“No one ever imagined that a problem concerning
Bulgarian nationals could become an issue in the French presidential
elections!” said Vladimir Sheytanov, the nurses’ first lawyer, after France’s
right-wing presidential candidate, Nicolas Sarkozy, declared that the freedom
of the nurses would be a priority for him.
While experts and
decision-makers are delighted about their new influence internationally, they
are not certain how best to use it.
“If the Bulgarian
authorities want to effectively use the influence that EU membership gives
them, they need to build a strong and unified strategy,” warned Chukov.
Experts point to
the danger of applying excessive political pressure, or of overestimating the
extent of EU support.
Fear of enraging Libya’s
volatile leader has been a guiding principle in Bulgarian diplomacy over the
trial and this fear remains alive.
“To people who
have never visited Libya or witnessed how this country functions, it is
difficult to imagine the fragility of the ground we step on when dealing with
this case,” said a foreign ministry source, expressing many diplomats’ belief
that a single incautious word could put the nurses at even greater risk.
Others, however,
believe Bulgaria
is in no danger of overreacting. “We have death sentences for innocent people.
I don’t see how it can be any worse,” said Chukov. He maintains the real danger
is of overestimating the will of the EU to get involved.
“[It remains an
issue] how deep this support is, and how far the EU countries would go with
it,” he said.
Accusations that
the EU and the United States show their solidarity only in words, while trying
to negotiate better energy deals with Muammar Gaddafi have already appeared in
the Bulgarian media.
But some remain
optimistic and hope public support for the nurses in the EU will grow enough to
outweigh the member states’ economic interests.
Albena Shkodrova
is BIRN Bulgaria country director. Balkan Insight is BIRN`s online publication.