Sunday, July 29, 2007

My Car :-)

this is my car:

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor were pardoned by President Georgi Parvanov upon their arrival in Sofia on Tuesday after spending eight-and-a-half years in prison in Libya.
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Bulgarian nurse Valya Cherveniashka celebrates with a relative.


The medics, who were sentenced to life in prison for contaminating children with the AIDS virus but now maintain their innocence, arrived on board a French presidential plane after the EU agreed a deal with Libya on medical aid and political ties.

The round of negotiations that freed the medics began over the weekend and involved European Union commissioner for foreign affairs, Benita Ferrero-Waldner, chief French presidential aide Claude Gueant and French first lady Cecilia Sarkozy.

The group, accompanied from Libya by Cecilia Sarkozy, was immediately greeted by a delegation of government officials and family members.

"I waited so long for this moment," nurse Snezhana Dimitrova said before falling into the arms of her loved ones, The Associated Press reported.

"I know I am free, I know I am on Bulgarian soil, but I still cannot believe it," 48-year-old nurse Christiana Valcheva told Reuters as the medics and their families wept and hugged each other at the airport.

"This is the result of very tough and long negotiations ... between the European Union and Libyan authorities," Bulgarian Foreign Minister Ivailo Kalfin said. "It has been a long discussion and debate with Libya until we reached this agreement."

According to Kalfin, the deal includes treatments for infected children and humanitarian assistance for their parents. Tripoli and the EU were also to begin discussions on the normalization of political relations.

Kalfin said medical checkups would be the first order of business after the group was welcomed in Sofia.

The nurses and doctor were twice sentenced to death for allegedly infecting more than 400 Libyan children with the virus that causes AIDS. Fifty of the children were reported to have died.

Last week the six medics had their sentences commuted to life in prison, following a $1 million per family payout to each family.

At one point, the nurses all confessed to the crimes, but later said they were coerced into making those confessions.

The children were infected through transfusions. During the trial of the nurses, a French scientist testified that poor hygiene at the hospital likely led to the contamination of the blood used in the transfusions.

He said the contamination dated to 1997 -- two years before the Bulgarians were hired to work in Libya.

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said Tuesday the EU could now move to normalize trade and political ties with Libya, AP reported.

"We hope to go on further normalizing our relations with Libya, our relations with Libya were in a large extent blocked by the non-settlement of this medics issue," Barroso told reporters. He said the 27-nation bloc could move to include Libya in regional trade and aid ties with other Mediterranean countries.

Meanwhile, French President Nicolas Sarkozy said Tuesday he would visit Libya following the release of the six. "I will have the chance tomorrow, with Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner, to make a political visit to Libya to help Libya to reintegrate the concert of nations."

Aides had said France linked Wednesday's trip to Libya with the release beforehand of the five Bulgarian nurses and Palestinian doctor. CNN.com

Saturday, July 21, 2007

SOFIA, Bulgaria (Reuters) -- Bulgaria and the European Union called on Libya on Wednesday to transfer six foreign medics to Sofia, after Tripoli lifted their death sentences for infecting hundreds of children with the HIV virus.


The five Bulgarian nurses and the Palestinian doctor, who have spent over eight years in jail already, could be pardoned by the Balkan country's president once they are sent to Sofia under a 1984 prisoner exchange agreement with Libya.

Following hectic diplomatic talks and payment of hundreds of millions of dollars to the families of 460 HIV victims, Tripoli commuted the death sentences against the six to life imprisonment late on Tuesday, paving the way for their release.

EU newcomer Bulgaria and its allies in Washington and Brussels, who say the medics are innocent and have pushed for their release, reacted with relief to the Tripoli ruling but cautioned it was not the end to the eight-year ordeal.

"I am calling for calmness and a little bit more patience, Prime Minister Sergei Stanishev said. "We are taking and will be taking all steps to bring this whole case to an end as soon as possible and see our compatriots very soon on Bulgarian soil".

Chief Prosecutor Boris Velchev said he would send to Libya a request for the medics' transfer by the end of the day.

The EU, which took part in negotiating the compensation deal with the HIV victims' families, said it had hoped for clemency but would now focus on helping to send the medics to Bulgaria.

"We hope now that the legal proceedings can start immediately for the transfer of the nurses and the medics back to Europe," EU Commissioner for External Relations Benita Ferrero-Waldner told Reuters.

The six were sentenced to death last year after being convicted of intentionally starting an HIV epidemic at a children's hospital in the Mediterranean port of Benghazi.

The medics say they are innocent and confessions central to their case were extracted under torture.

Sofia's Western allies have suggested that not freeing the nurses would hurt Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi's efforts to emerge from decades of diplomatic isolation, a process he began by scrapping a prohibited weapons programme in 2003.

In Bulgaria, where people wear ribbons saying "You are not alone" in a campaign to support the medics, reactions to the Tuesday ruling were ranging from relief to disappointment.

"I expected the nurses to be pardoned and fully acquitted, because I am sure they are innocent. The Libyans took all they could, I feel really sad about our nurses," said theatre director Katya Popova, 50.

But the victims' families, who received $1 million each in compensation, have said the case was part of a Western attempt to undermine Muslims and Libya. Fifty-six of the children have died, arousing widespread anger there.

A spokesman for the Libyan children's families, Idriss Lagha, said the funds for the financial settlement had come from the Benghazi International Fund, which had been financed by the European Union, the United States, Bulgaria and Libya.

Bulgaria, the EU and the United States say Libya has used the medics as scapegoats to deflect criticism of its dilapidated health care sector.

Foreign HIV experts testified during the case in Libya that the infections started before the six arrived at the hospital and were more likely to be the result of poor hygiene.

Last month, Bulgaria granted citizenship to the Palestinian doctor to help bring him out of Libya if the death penalties were commuted.


CNN.com





my holyday:

Picture form Golden Sands.

this is in Bulgaria. Where is Bulgaria?

here:

Hello

i will post here what i do in my day/night :-)