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预防艾滋病——国外

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预防AIDS/STD 安全性行为

 


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欢迎jessiejc加入这个blog  (作者置顶)

    jessiejc是位女生,她也在为红十字会工作,并且在做预防艾滋病和安全性行为方面的项目。


    很高兴也很有缘分和她在青岛相识。而且,很高兴地知道,我们的生日靠得那么近。


    jessiejc愿意与我一起为这个blog收集有意义的文章,并且将这个blog的资源与各位关注预防艾滋病和安全性行为的同仁分享。


    在博客中国,做预防艾滋病这样一个专题的博客并不多。在遇到jessiejc后,我就向她介绍了我这个blog,她对这个blog十分感兴趣。然后,很荣幸地,能够邀请到她作为blog的又一个作者,让我在做预防艾滋病的活动时感到不再孤独。


    我愿意将这个blog不仅作为我们预防艾滋病活动的资料集散中心和工作交流平台,也作为我们友谊的桥梁。因为我们认同一个共同的宣言,并且都在为这样伟大崇高的精神感动;因为我们拥有一个共同的梦想,并且都在用一种几乎相同的方式追梦;因为我们实践一个共同的事业,并且都在期待着我们付出有益于他人。我们生长在同一座城市,虽在异地求学,但好像我们有足够的理由,心灵相通。

    葭葭,在我们一起努力下,这个blog已经有二百篇文章了。这二百篇文章凝聚着我半年的汗水,也有你的功劳的。这第二百篇,特意在今天送给你,但愿你能喜欢。但愿你我用友谊,用热情,用汗水,将这个blog建设得更好。期待着和你至少见证这个blog第一千篇文章的诞生,呵呵。

    把一段我喜欢的flash送给你,祝愿我们未来的友谊会更美好!

- 作者: onecountry 2005年08月11日, 星期四 02:22  回复(7) |  引用(1) 加入博采

中国改革开放30年来谈“性”色变已成往事
摘要:30年来,中国社会曾出现两次有关性的社会大讨论:一次发生在1979年6月,导火线是一张电影的接吻剧照;另一次发生在2008年4月,导火线是一堂婚前守贞课。 性,这个伴随着五千年人类史的字眼,在30年前的中国好像洪水猛兽一样。然而在30年后的今天,性走入了高堂雅室、走进了学校课堂。 查看全文

- 作者: onecountry 2008年12月12日, 星期五 18:33  回复(0) |  引用(0) 加入博采

妈妈,别为我哭泣
摘要:今年12月1日是第二十一个世界艾滋病日。 据估计,中国现存艾滋病病毒感染者和病人约70万,其中艾滋病病人8.5万。目前,全国共有7.8万儿童因艾滋病失去单亲或双亲。由于社会歧视,他们饱尝了人间的冷暖悲欢,有的无法上学,有的生活困难,有的孤独无助。为了保障艾滋病致孤儿童的合法权益,我国出台了一系列政策法规。例如,所有艾滋病病毒感染者和病人家庭的儿童都能免费上学、鼓励亲属和社会收养艾滋病致孤儿童等。然而,消除艾滋歧视,仍需要全社会的长期努力。 查看全文

- 作者: onecountry 2008年12月4日, 星期四 16:13  回复(0) |  引用(0) 加入博采

消除歧视是防艾良方(不吐不快)

消除歧视是防艾良方(不吐不快)

王君平 《 人民日报 》( 2008年12月4日   14 版)

  在第二十一个世界艾滋病日前夕,孟林和小枫两名艾滋病病毒感染者荣获贝利马丁奖,这是艾滋病病毒感染者首次获此奖项。

  防治艾滋病,需要感染者的参与。对感染者的表彰,不仅仅是对他们防艾工作的肯定,也是希望更多人消除对艾滋病的歧视。

  事实证明,艾滋病的传播、蔓延与防治不是一个简单的医学问题,而是一个复杂的社会问题。一位专家就曾非常形象地指出,艾滋病在中国地图上最初只是一个小点,后来就变成一片,最后竟然在地图上都找不到一块空白。

   多年来,我国致力于宣传普及艾滋知识并取得了明显的成效,但因缺乏艾滋知识而造成的歧视还没有彻底消除。日前,一项在中国6个城市对6000多人进行的 艾滋知识调查报告显示:有超过48%的受访者认为有可能通过蚊虫叮咬感染艾滋病病毒。无知加剧了人们“恐艾”的心理,加重了偏见和歧视,极大地影响着艾滋 病预防工作的有效开展。一些感染者因害怕社会的歧视,不敢公开身份,无法进行有效干预,可能造成艾滋病在更大范围滋生和蔓延。

  全球的实践证明,消除歧视是遏制艾滋的一个良方。只有全社会携起手来,对艾滋病人多一点关爱,少一点冷漠,艾滋病才能得到有效控制。

http://paper.people.com.cn/rmrb/html/2008-12/04/content_151502.htm

- 作者: onecountry 2008年12月4日, 星期四 16:13  回复(0) |  引用(0) 加入博采

让歧视远离艾滋病致孤儿童
摘要:  “在巨大的苦难面前,人无法掉过脸去”。在人类面临各种灾难时,每个人都不是孤岛,都是生命的共同体,需要彼此偎依,互相助力。其实,只要我们向他们投去温暖和关爱的目光,我们就会看到,在人类迎战艾滋病的战场上,孩子们也是一种力量。他们的成长和抗争,不仅给自己尊严和自信,也给人类信心和力量。 查看全文

- 作者: onecountry 2008年12月4日, 星期四 16:11  回复(0) |  引用(0) 加入博采

把党和政府的关怀落实到体制机制和政策措施上
摘要:在第二十一个世界艾滋病日前夕,国务院防治艾滋病工作委员会全体会议在北京召开。中共中央政治局常委、国务院副总理李克强主持会议并讲话。他强调,要深入贯彻落实科学发展观,把党和政府对艾滋病患者及其家属的关怀落实到综合防治的体制机制和政策措施上,使艾滋病防治工作取得新的进展。 查看全文

- 作者: onecountry 2008年12月4日, 星期四 16:09  回复(0) |  引用(0) 加入博采

让每一位公民都掌握防控知识 让每一位患者都得到及时救助
摘要:今年12月1日是第二十一个世界艾滋病日。中共中央总书记、国家主席、中央军委主席胡锦涛和中共中央政治局常委、国务院副总理李克强专程来到北京地坛医院,考察艾滋病防治工作,向奋战在艾滋病防治工作第一线的科研人员和志愿者表示诚挚的问候和衷心的感谢。 查看全文

- 作者: onecountry 2008年12月4日, 星期四 16:08  回复(0) |  引用(0) 加入博采

“我心里一直惦记着你们”
摘要:在12月1日世界艾滋病日到来之际,中共中央政治局常委、国务院总理温家宝专程来到安徽省阜阳市,深入村庄,亲切看望艾滋病患者、孤儿和基层医护人员,了解艾滋病防治工作情况。 查看全文

- 作者: onecountry 2008年12月4日, 星期四 15:58  回复(0) |  引用(0) 加入博采

携手对抗“世纪瘟疫”(热点解读)

携手对抗“世纪瘟疫”(热点解读)

本报记者 刘小明 《 人民日报 》( 2008年12月1日   05 版)

  11月30日,为纪念“世界艾滋病日”,国家体育场悬挂红丝带。
  CFP供图

  卫生部艾滋病预防处处长孙新华说,艾滋病传入中国20多年了,时间不算短,但人们对艾滋病依然不甚了解,认识上存在误区。只有让更多的人了解艾滋病,参与到预防艾滋病的社会行动计划中来,才能减少乃至消除它的危害。

  前几天,有关方面组织了一次防治艾滋病的培训活动,参加者包括媒体记者和一些省市区宣传干部及公安部治安局人员。培训班考察了香港动员社会力量防治艾滋病的做法。香港的经验受到联合国艾滋病规划署的称赞、推荐。

  艾滋病患者知多少

  我国累计报告病例26万

   据孙新华介绍:我国累计报告艾滋病病例26万多例,估计艾滋病病毒感染者总数约70万人(相当一部分感染者未作过病毒抗体测试,自己不知情)。这个数字 看起来并不显眼,比起几千万人患有高血压、糖尿病、癌症的数字似乎算不得什么。然而从全球范围看,人类应对艾滋病挑战形势十分严峻。

  艾滋病(AIDS)的学名为“获得性免疫缺损综合征”,致病罪魁祸首是艾滋病病毒(HIV)。它一旦侵入人体,破坏了免疫系统,就将危及生命。这种病于上世纪80年代初被发现,到2007年底,全球累计有2500万人死于艾滋病。

   艾滋病的特殊性还在于,它的传染途径主要有三种:性传播,血液传播,母婴传播。由于染病过程常常同色情、吸毒、卖血等活动有关,中国民间不少人把这种病 视为“脏病”。患者说不出口,见不得人,受到歧视。其实,与艾滋病人同处一室,握手、拥抱、一起就餐甚至接吻,都不会被传染。

  传播呈现新态势

  性传播感染者上升到首位

   封闭的社会,传统保守的性观念固然可以起到阻止艾滋病蔓延的一些作用。但是今日开放的中国社会不可能完全包裹自己,阻断与世界的交流。国务院防治艾滋病 工作委员会的石凯介绍说,前些年我国艾滋病感染者中血液传播(卖血、输血)比例较高,从去年起发生了新的变化,性传播感染者上升到第一位,主要是异性间传 播,占40.4%,同性性传播占5.1%。另外,因吸毒(共用针管注射)而感染的患者数字上升也很快。艾滋病的这种发展趋势在香港地区出现更早一些。

   香港居民是如何行动起来防艾的呢?内地培训班印象最深刻的一点是,香港的艾滋病防控工作采取政府主导、给予资金支持,同时大力发挥非政府组织、社会志愿 者等的作用和积极性,以社区为活动基地,扎实稳步推进。比如,一群年轻人成立了名为“关怀艾滋”的民间组织,成员有医务工作者、媒体记者等,主要是志愿 者。他们有针对性地在学校开展青少年预防计划;到社区派发安全套;推动反对歧视艾滋病人条例的立法;帮助高危人群费进行HIV病毒抗体测试;打入性服务 工作者及男同性恋人群活动场所开展工作,提醒相关人员采用安全的性行为。类似的防艾民间组织,香港还有很多。

  再如,香港卫生署和“红丝 带中心”等组织推行的“美沙酮计划”,已有1万多人参加。美沙酮作为一种海洛因毒品替代物,毒性低,价格低廉。记者深入遍及香港各个社区的美沙酮诊所看 到,许多患者每天到诊所交1港元,喝上小半杯绿色的美沙酮药液,再饮一些水,便从容离开,无人监视他们,也无人过问他们的隐私。这样他们戒了毒瘾,也就不 会再到处找海洛因、共用针管注射毒品。香港吸毒人员的艾滋病感染率现已降到不足1%,远远低于东南亚地区平均水平。

  疫情增速在减缓

  仍需重视防治、关爱患者

   孙新华介绍情况时说,中国政府非常重视防治艾滋病的工作,2006年公布并施行《艾滋病防治条例》。条例规定了政府及有关部门、工会、共青团、妇联等团 体,以及居委会、村委会等组织和个人在艾滋病防治工作中的职责和义务。条例还将前几年已经实行的“四免一关怀”政策制度化。四免是:对农村和城镇生活困难 的感染者免费提供抗病毒药物;免费提供咨询和检测;免费向感染病毒的孕妇提供阻断药物和婴儿检测试剂;免收艾滋病病人的孤儿上学费用;一关怀是将生活困难 的艾滋病病人纳入政府救助范围,加强防治艾滋病宣传,不许歧视艾滋病感染者和病人。

  中国国家领导人多次亲临医院和病区看望艾滋病病人,与他们亲切握手,鼓励他们战胜病魔,并要求全社会加强艾滋病防治工作,关爱艾滋病感染者和病人。

   监测数据显示,吸毒、暗娼、孕产妇哨点的艾滋病病毒抗体阳性率在我国有逐年增加的趋势,但是增速比较缓慢。不容忽视的现实是,目前艾滋病流行因素广泛存 在。我国约有44万感染者还不了解自己的感染状况,存在进一步传播的危险。社会对感染者的歧视现象,使有高危行为的人不愿接受艾滋病检查,感染者不愿意暴 露自己的感染状况,不但增加了艾滋病传播的危险性,也增加了防治工作的难度。我们时刻不可放松、忽视艾滋病的防治工作,中国人要通过自己的不懈努力,为人 类降伏“世纪瘟疫”做出应有贡献。

http://paper.people.com.cn/rmrb/html/2008-12/01/content_149286.htm

- 作者: onecountry 2008年12月4日, 星期四 15:55  回复(0) |  引用(0) 加入博采

联合国赞赏中国政府防艾行动

“鸟巢”悬挂红丝带

联合国赞赏中国政府防艾行动

■歧视仍是防艾主要障碍

《 人民日报 》( 2008年12月1日   05 版)

  本报北京11月30日电  (记者白剑峰、王君平)今天上午,北京的标志性建筑“鸟巢”出现了一个巨型的艾滋病防治标志——红丝带。

  国家体育场红丝带悬挂仪式由国务院防治艾滋病工作委员会办公室、卫生部主办,联合国艾滋病规划署、北京市防治艾滋病工作委员会办公室协办。

  今天,联合国艾滋病规划署公布了一项研究报告,据对中国6个城市6000人的调查显示,公众依然存在对艾滋病的歧视。艾滋病知识仍比较欠缺。性行为比较活跃的人群对其接触艾滋病的风险认识不足。

  卫生部新闻发言人毛群安说:“当前,对艾滋病病毒感染者和病人的歧视,仍然是妨碍艾滋病防治工作的主要障碍之一。红丝带在‘鸟巢’的亮相,显示了中国抗击艾滋病,尤其是消除有关艾滋病歧视的决心。”

  联合国艾滋病规划署执行主任彼得·皮澳特博士说,“艾滋病正在世界蔓延……我高度赞赏中国政府用如此催人奋进的行动,向世界展示其遏制艾滋病的领导力。”

http://paper.people.com.cn/rmrb/html/2008-12/01/content_149288.htm

- 作者: onecountry 2008年12月4日, 星期四 15:54  回复(0) |  引用(0) 加入博采

干预需要配套政策支持

卫生部监测数据表明,男男性行为人群成为艾滋病病毒感染率上升最快人群

干预需要配套政策支持

本报记者  李晓宏 《 人民日报 》( 2008年12月1日   05 版)

  根据卫生部监测数据,男男性行为人群(MSM)成为我国目前艾滋病病毒感染率上升最快的人群,该人群艾滋病病毒感染率已由2005年的0.4%上升到目前的4.9%。卫生部表示,将在下一步工作中加大在男男性行为人群中的干预力度。

   清华大学社会学系教授、艾滋病政策研究中心主任景军说,所谓男男性行为人群是指男人之间发生性行为者,景军介绍说,我国处于性活跃期的男性同性恋者约占 处于性活跃期男性普通人群之2%至4%。对该人群系统的干预已经刻不容缓。目前,我国已将男男性行为人群列为艾滋病防控重点,今年3月,卫生部印发《开展 男男性行为人群艾滋病综合防治试点工作方案》。

  据介绍,清华大学艾滋病政策研究所去年10月在西南某城市开展了一次男男性行为人群艾滋 病感染者需求调查。29名受访者中希望在如下方面得到配套政策支持:首要需求是对隐私的保护,主要是对其感染情况的保密、加大检测和检查力度、强烈的心理 咨询服务需求、健康教育服务、完善治疗服务。建立病员卡,实现卡随人走,药随人走。最后是就业需求。建议政府相关部门能出台政策,给予这些特殊的创业者一 些优惠措施,如就业培训、减税、小额贷款等。

http://paper.people.com.cn/rmrb/html/2008-12/01/content_149290.htm

- 作者: onecountry 2008年12月4日, 星期四 15:53  回复(0) |  引用(0) 加入博采

全球抗击艾滋病斗争进展显著
摘要:尽管全球艾滋病疫情蔓延的趋势还没有得到逆转,但联合国艾滋病规划署今年发表的报告认为,全球艾滋病防治在2007年首次出现了“明显的重要进展”,艾滋病病毒新增感染人数和死亡人数都有所下降。艾滋病规划署和世界卫生组织认为,这一进展要归功于大量的资金投入和有效的预防与治疗。 查看全文

- 作者: onecountry 2008年12月4日, 星期四 15:49  回复(0) |  引用(0) 加入博采

安全套防艾不容置疑

中国疾控中心专家

安全套防艾不容置疑

《 人民日报 》( 2008年11月28日   05 版)

   本报北京11月27日电 (记者王君平)针对日前“安全套不防艾滋病”的传言,中国疾控中心性病艾滋病中心主任吴尊友强调,安全套防艾有效,保护作用不 容置疑。这是记者从在京召开的全国男性行为人群艾滋病防治工作经验交流暨《朋友》项目十周年庆典与贝利马丁颁奖大会上获悉的。

  “用乳胶 制成的安全套有孔隙,艾滋病病毒的直径远小于乳胶的孔隙,艾滋病病毒可以像苍蝇穿鸟笼子一样传染给其他健康的人。”针对这一说法,吴尊友说,如果只是单纯 的艾滋病病毒,不会造成传播。带有病毒遗传基因的人体细胞从一个人传到另外一个人,才是造成艾滋病传播的真正原因。

  吴尊友说,推广安全套以来,艾滋病感染率明显降低。安全套乳胶的确是有孔隙的,但正确、全程使用质量可靠的安全套,能够大大降低艾滋病病毒的传播,这是不容置疑的。

http://paper.people.com.cn/rmrb/html/2008-11/28/content_147926.htm

- 作者: onecountry 2008年12月4日, 星期四 15:47  回复(0) |  引用(0) 加入博采

“防艾”在争议中深入(观念之变)
摘要:  我国内地艾滋病病毒感染者中,女性所占比例已从1998年的7.1%上升到35%,10年间翻了5倍。刘康迈说,即使安全套100%防艾滋,也不能放松道德约束,首先要提倡正确的性观念。艾滋病正在成为一种长期存在的慢性传染病,使用安全套不只是为个人,更是防止危及他人。 查看全文

- 作者: onecountry 2008年12月4日, 星期四 15:44  回复(0) |  引用(0) 加入博采

调查揭示少女们滥用紧急避孕药的危害
摘要:近期一项调查显示,在上海市6家医院的591名做人流手术的未婚女性的平均年龄只有17岁。其中大多数人认为在药店购买紧急避孕药更能保护隐私,有的把它们当日常避孕药使用,是什么原因导致了这种现象,被滥用的紧急避孕药会对女性尤其是少女产生怎样的危害,一起来看记者的调查报道。 查看全文

- 作者: onecountry 2007年08月8日, 星期三 15:02  回复(0) |  引用(1) 加入博采

调查揭示少女们滥用紧急避孕药的危害
摘要:近期一项调查显示,在上海市6家医院的591名做人流手术的未婚女性的平均年龄只有17岁。其中大多数人认为在药店购买紧急避孕药更能保护隐私,有的把它们当日常避孕药使用,是什么原因导致了这种现象,被滥用的紧急避孕药会对女性尤其是少女产生怎样的危害,一起来看记者的调查报道。 查看全文

- 作者: onecountry 2007年08月8日, 星期三 15:02  回复(0) |  引用(1) 加入博采

利比亚艾滋传播案历史背景
Annan 'Concerned' on Libya AIDS Sentence

The Associated Press
Saturday, December 23, 2006; 10:03 PM

UNITED NATIONS -- Secretary-General Kofi Annan said Friday he was "deeply concerned" about a Libyan court's decision to reimpose death sentences on five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor convicted of infecting children with HIV.

Annan offered U.N. support for the children and for efforts to "find a humane solution for the fate of the medics."

"I am deeply concerned by confirmation of a guilty verdict and a death sentence," Annan said.

President Bush and European leaders have expressed outrage over the death sentences, imposed despite scientific evidence the children were infected with the virus before the medical workers came to Libya.

The defendants were convicted and sentenced to death a year ago on charges that they intentionally spread HIV to more than 400 children at a hospital in Benghazi. Libya's Supreme Court ordered a retrial after an international outcry.

A French doctor testified at the first trial that strains of HIV were circulating at the hospital well before the nurses and doctor arrived in March 1998.

On Dec. 6, the journal Nature published an analysis of viral strains from some of the children, showing changes in the virus proved it was contracted at least three years before the defendants arrived at the hospital.

The case has hurt Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi's recent efforts to improve his country's relationship with the West, but has not stopped the rapprochement entirely. This summer, the United States reopened its embassy in Tripoli, 16 years after it severed ties with the country.

Annan, whose tenure ends on Dec. 31, praised the international community for providing treatment and medicine to the infected children. Fifty children have died, and the rest have been treated in Europe.

© 2006 The Associated Press
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/12/23/AR2006122301057_pf.html

Time ebbing for 6 foreigners in Libya AIDS case

By Elisabeth Rosenthal International Herald Tribune

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2005
SOFIA In 1998, at a time when her country was mired in hyperinflation, Valya Chervenyashka left her rural Bulgarian village and went to work as a nurse in Benghazi, Libya, for $250 a month, to pay for her daughters' college education.
 
Today, Chervenyashka and four other Bulgarian nurses, as well as a Palestinian doctor, are under death sentence in a Libyan jail and facing a firing squad, accused of intentionally infecting more than 400 hospitalized Libyan children with the AIDS virus - in order, according to the initial indictment, to undermine Libyan state security.
 
They were also charged with working for Mossad, the Israeli intelligence service.
 
Although the motive of subversion has since been dropped, the death sentence stands.
 
The nurses' final appeal is scheduled to be heard by the Libyan Supreme Court on Nov. 15.
 
With that date approaching, President Georgi Parvanov of Bulgaria plans to raise the case at a meeting with President George W. Bush in Washington on Monday.
 
International experts, including Dr. Luc Montagnier, the eminent discoverer of the AIDS virus, have traveled to Libya to study the situation and have testified that the children were infected as a result of poor sanitary practices at the Al Fateh hospital in Benghazi. The nurses have testified that they were tortured in the months after their arrest.
 
"Nurses from little towns in Bulgaria acting as agents of Mossad?" said Antoanetta Ouzounova, one of Chervenyashka's daughters, now 28. "It all sounds funny and absurd until you realiz your mother could die for it."
 
For seven years the nurses' plight has simmered on the back burner of international politics, especially since Colonel Muammar el-Qaddafi, the Libyan president, renounced terrorism and nuclear weapons in 2003.
 
Last year, even as Condoleezza Rice, the U.S. secretary of state, and Romano Prodi, then head of the European Commission, were protesting the case in meetings, the commission invited Qaddafi to Brussels for lunch, and the United States lifted trade sanctions.
 
But now, with time running out, the simmering case may well come to boil, threatening Qaddafi's rehabilitation.
 
Negotiations to secure the nurses' release are "not moving well," Ivailo Kalfin, Bulgaria's foreign minister, said in a recent interview here.
 
Libyan officials have suggested that the Bulgarians pay $10 million in compensation for each of the 420 children allegedly infected with AIDS, according to Bulgarian and EU diplomats.
 
The Europeans have countered with offers of HIV treatment and humanitarian help.
 
"These women are hostages," said Solomon Passy, head of the Bulgarian National Assembly's Committee on Foreign Policy.
 
Last summer, the EU's commissioner for external relations, Benita Ferrero-Waldner, visited the Benghazi hospital where the nurses had worked.
 
"The EU is leaving no stone unturned to try to secure the release of the Bulgarian nurses and the Palestinian medic," said Emma Udwin, the commissioner's spokeswoman, while declining to go into specifics.
 
If the nurses had been Italian or British or American, diplomats say, the case would have provoked a major international protest, with posters and yellow ribbons demanding their release. But here in Sofia, a lazy city of trendy cafés and decaying Communist monuments, there is only muted outrage.
 
Bulgaria is trying not to rock the boat so as to be admitted to the EU as planned in 2007; it is accustomed to second-class diplomatic status.
 
Kalfin, the foreign minister, said with a shrug: "It is one thing when Britain raises an issue; it is another when Bulgaria raises it."
 
In hopes of brokering a deal, the European Union has sent diplomats and medical teams to Libya to study and consult on the country's HIV/AIDS problem. It has flown dozens of children from Libya to Europe for medical treatment and held training sessions for doctors in Libya.
 
Bulgaria recently agreed to send Libya 20 of the 50 pieces of medical equipment it had requested, and even offered to restructure the $27 million in Libyan debt it holds.
 
But Libya has countered that Bulgaria should also negotiate a payment of "blood money" to the families of the infected children, saying that the families might then express forgiveness toward the nurses and ask for dismissal of the court case, a procedure permitted under Islamic law.
 
The Libyan figure of $10 million for each child draws parallels to the $10 million Libya agreed to pay each of the families of the 270 people killed in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 by its agents over Lockerbie, Scotland, in 1988. For Bulgaria, it would amount to 25 percent of its gross domestic product. The Bulgarian government has rejected the idea. It rejects the concept of "blood money," Kalfin said. "Second, there's no way to compare this to Lockerbie."
 
Nonetheless, a senior EU diplomat said there had been "underground meetings" about a payment.
 
There is little doubt that in the late 1990s, Libya was coming to grips with a serious HIV/AIDS outbreak. There is also no evidence that it was caused by the five Bulgarian nurses and the Palestinian doctor - although they may have inadvertently spread the virus when treating children with blood or syringes provided by the hospital.
 
A team of World Health Organization doctors dispatched to study HIV in Libya in late 1998 concluded that there were "multiple sources of infection." Their internal report was never released but was provided to the International Herald Tribune by an official familiar with the case.
 
In Benghazi, the report said, "nosocomial transmission" - accidental spread during medical procedures - was "mainly responsible for the current epidemic." It added that sterile supplies and better equipment were needed.
 
Three years later, Montagnier was hired by Qaddafi's son as an independent expert to study the situation at Al Fateh Hospital.
 
"Some of the children were infected before the Bulgarian nurses even arrived, and others after they left," said Montagnier said in a telephone interview, recalling his 2001 visit.
 
He said that most of the children were also infected with various subtypes of hepatitis C, which can be transmitted to children only by injection. This, he said, clearly demonstrated that "there were many errors in hygiene in this hospital at the time."
 
In a handwritten 2003 declaration to the Bulgarian Foreign Ministry, one nurse, Snezhana Dimitrova, described torture that had included electric shocks and beatings.
 
"They tied my hands behind my back," she wrote. "Then they hung me from a door. It feels like they are stretching you from all sides. My torso was twisted and my shoulders were dislocated from their joints from time to time. The pain cannot be described. The translator was shouting, 'Confess or you will die here."'
 
In February 2000, a year after their arrest, charges were filed against the nurses - Chervenyashka; Dimitrova; Kristiana Valcheva; Nasya Nenova; and Valentina Siropulo - and the doctor, Ashraf Ahmad Jum'a.
 
After a quiet trial in May 2004, the five nurses and the Palestinian doctor were sentenced to death by firing squad.
 
The Libyan police officers accused by the nurses of torture were acquitted.
 
Experts on all sides express skepticism that the conviction will be overturned or that the nurses will be released in November, either by the court or by Qaddafi himself, because such a reversal would fly in the face of overwhelming public opinion in Libya.
 
Complicating matters, the experts say, is the fact that the Qaddafi regime decided early on to blame the foreign nurses for HIV rather than acknowledging a medically embarrassing and politically dangerous situation.
 
"They've fingered the Bulgarians as murderers and they cannot step back," Passy said. Justice, he said, is in the hands of Qaddafi, "and he can free the nurses, but he will have to pay a high political price."
 
 
 
Matthew Brunwasser contributed reporting forthis article.
 
 
SOFIA In 1998, at a time when her country was mired in hyperinflation, Valya Chervenyashka left her rural Bulgarian village and went to work as a nurse in Benghazi, Libya, for $250 a month, to pay for her daughters' college education.
 
Today, Chervenyashka and four other Bulgarian nurses, as well as a Palestinian doctor, are under death sentence in a Libyan jail and facing a firing squad, accused of intentionally infecting more than 400 hospitalized Libyan children with the AIDS virus - in order, according to the initial indictment, to undermine Libyan state security.
 
They were also charged with working for Mossad, the Israeli intelligence service.
 
Although the motive of subversion has since been dropped, the death sentence stands.
 
The nurses' final appeal is scheduled to be heard by the Libyan Supreme Court on Nov. 15.
 
With that date approaching, President Georgi Parvanov of Bulgaria plans to raise the case at a meeting with President George W. Bush in Washington on Monday.
 
International experts, including Dr. Luc Montagnier, the eminent discoverer of the AIDS virus, have traveled to Libya to study the situation and have testified that the children were infected as a result of poor sanitary practices at the Al Fateh hospital in Benghazi. The nurses have testified that they were tortured in the months after their arrest.
 
"Nurses from little towns in Bulgaria acting as agents of Mossad?" said Antoanetta Ouzounova, one of Chervenyashka's daughters, now 28. "It all sounds funny and absurd until you realize your mother could die for it."
 
For seven years the nurses' plight has simmered on the back burner of international politics, especially since Colonel Muammar el-Qaddafi, the Libyan president, renounced terrorism and nuclear weapons in 2003.
 
Last year, even as Condoleezza Rice, the U.S. secretary of state, and Romano Prodi, then head of the European Commission, were protesting the case in meetings, the commission invited Qaddafi to Brussels for lunch, and the United States lifted trade sanctions.
 
But now, with time running out, the simmering case may well come to boil, threatening Qaddafi's rehabilitation.
 
Negotiations to secure the nurses' release are "not moving well," Ivailo Kalfin, Bulgaria's foreign minister, said in a recent interview here.
 
Libyan officials have suggested that the Bulgarians pay $10 million in compensation for each of the 420 children allegedly infected with AIDS, according to Bulgarian and EU diplomats.
 
The Europeans have countered with offers of HIV treatment and humanitarian help.
 
"These women are hostages," said Solomon Passy, head of the Bulgarian National Assembly's Committee on Foreign Policy.
 
Last summer, the EU's commissioner for external relations, Benita Ferrero-Waldner, visited the Benghazi hospital where the nurses had worked.
 
"The EU is leaving no stone unturned to try to secure the release of the Bulgarian nurses and the Palestinian medic," said Emma Udwin, the commissioner's spokeswoman, while declining to go into specifics.
 
If the nurses had been Italian or British or American, diplomats say, the case would have provoked a major international protest, with posters and yellow ribbons demanding their release. But here in Sofia, a lazy city of trendy cafés and decaying Communist monuments, there is only muted outrage.
 
Bulgaria is trying not to rock the boat so as to be admitted to the EU as planned in 2007; it is accustomed to second-class diplomatic status.
 
Kalfin, the foreign minister, said with a shrug: "It is one thing when Britain raises an issue; it is another when Bulgaria raises it."
 
In hopes of brokering a deal, the European Union has sent diplomats and medical teams to Libya to study and consult on the country's HIV/AIDS problem. It has flown dozens of children from Libya to Europe for medical treatment and held training sessions for doctors in Libya.
 
Bulgaria recently agreed to send Libya 20 of the 50 pieces of medical equipment it had requested, and even offered to restructure the $27 million in Libyan debt it holds.
 
But Libya has countered that Bulgaria should also negotiate a payment of "blood money" to the families of the infected children, saying that the families might then express forgiveness toward the nurses and ask for dismissal of the court case, a procedure permitted under Islamic law.
 
The Libyan figure of $10 million for each child draws parallels to the $10 million Libya agreed to pay each of the families of the 270 people killed in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 by its agents over Lockerbie, Scotland, in 1988. For Bulgaria, it would amount to 25 percent of its gross domestic product. The Bulgarian government has rejected the idea. It rejects the concept of "blood money," Kalfin said. "Second, there's no way to compare this to Lockerbie."
 
Nonetheless, a senior EU diplomat said there had been "underground meetings" about a payment.
 
There is little doubt that in the late 1990s, Libya was coming to grips with a serious HIV/AIDS outbreak. There is also no evidence that it was caused by the five Bulgarian nurses and the Palestinian doctor - although they may have inadvertently spread the virus when treating children with blood or syringes provided by the hospital.
 
A team of World Health Organization doctors dispatched to study HIV in Libya in late 1998 concluded that there were "multiple sources of infection." Their internal report was never released but was provided to the International Herald Tribune by an official familiar with the case.
 
In Benghazi, the report said, "nosocomial transmission" - accidental spread during medical procedures - was "mainly responsible for the current epidemic." It added that sterile supplies and better equipment were needed.
 
Three years later, Montagnier was hired by Qaddafi's son as an independent expert to study the situation at Al Fateh Hospital.
 
"Some of the children were infected before the Bulgarian nurses even arrived, and others after they left," said Montagnier said in a telephone interview, recalling his 2001 visit.
 
He said that most of the children were also infected with various subtypes of hepatitis C, which can be transmitted to children only by injection. This, he said, clearly demonstrated that "there were many errors in hygiene in this hospital at the time."
 
In a handwritten 2003 declaration to the Bulgarian Foreign Ministry, one nurse, Snezhana Dimitrova, described torture that had included electric shocks and beatings.
 
"They tied my hands behind my back," she wrote. "Then they hung me from a door. It feels like they are stretching you from all sides. My torso was twisted and my shoulders were dislocated from their joints from time to time. The pain cannot be described. The translator was shouting, 'Confess or you will die here."'
 
In February 2000, a year after their arrest, charges were filed against the nurses - Chervenyashka; Dimitrova; Kristiana Valcheva; Nasya Nenova; and Valentina Siropulo - and the doctor, Ashraf Ahmad Jum'a.
 
After a quiet trial in May 2004, the five nurses and the Palestinian doctor were sentenced to death by firing squad.
 
The Libyan police officers accused by the nurses of torture were acquitted.
 
Experts on all sides express skepticism that the conviction will be overturned or that the nurses will be released in November, either by the court or by Qaddafi himself, because such a reversal would fly in the face of overwhelming public opinion in Libya.
 
Complicating matters, the experts say, is the fact that the Qaddafi regime decided early on to blame the foreign nurses for HIV rather than acknowledging a medically embarrassing and politically dangerous situation.
 
"They've fingered the Bulgarians as murderers and they cannot step back," Passy said. Justice, he said, is in the hands of Qaddafi, "and he can free the nurses, but he will have to pay a high political price."
 
 
 
Matthew Brunwasser contributed reporting for this article.
 
PLoS Med. 2006 November; 3(11): e514.
Published online 2006 November 21. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.0030514.
Six Imprisoned Health-Care Workers in Libya Are Pawns in a Far Larger Strategic Game
The repercussions are enormous
Laurie Garrett
 
The scientific community, AIDS activists, and the Libyan government would do well to recognize that the political and diplomatic import of the case of the Benghazi Six involves a great deal more than the lives of five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian physician. At stake are some of the most profound political issues of our time: terrorism, nuclear proliferation, the freedom of movement of health-care workers and scientists, and the Biological Weapons Convention. Although human rights advocates rightly decry the physical torture these individuals have been subjected to, and their death sentences, it is critical to recognize that the unfortunate Benghazi Six—Bulgarian nurses Snezhana Dimitrova, Nasya Nenova, Valentina Siropulo, Valya Chervenyashka, and Kristiyana Valtcheva, and Palestinian physician Ahmed Ashraf Al Hadjudi—are pawns in a far larger game.
The Geopolitical Background

In 2003 Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, the longtime leader of Libya, initiated discussions through American and European diplomatic channels signaling interest in placing Libya within the larger world community. Isolated under the labels of “rogue state” and “supporter of terrorism,” Libya was constrained by United Nations sanctions that, among other things, limited that country’s ability to pump and sell its vast oil reserves or to purchase the vital electronics and equipment needed to modernize its oil fields. Breaking those constraints meant renouncing all ties to terrorism and admitting responsibility for the 1988 explosion of Pan Am Flight 103, the jet that crashedinto Lockerbie after a bomb placed in the jet’s cargo hold by Libyan operatives exploded, claiming the lives of 270 people. Gaddafi, after initially denying any Libyan responsibility for the international crime, in 1999 handed over one of his intelligence officers for trial in Scotland, where he remains in prison today.

Pained by the sanctions, in 2003 Libya formally acknowledged to the United Nations Security Council responsibility for the Lockerbie bombing, and began negotiations with representatives of the families of the Flight 103 victims. Libya ultimately paid the families US$2.16 billion in 2005; another US$540 million in promised payment was withdrawn by Libya because the United States Bush Administration maintained the country on its terrorism watch list.

At stake are some of the most profound political issues of our time.

In addition, the Gaddafi government has quietly admitted to working with Pakistani nuclear weapons scientist Dr. Abdul Qadeer (“A. Q.”) Khan. Libya has not only abandoned its nuclear weapons dreams, but has cooperated in international investigations of A. Q. Khan’s dangerous spread of nuclear weapons–related knowledge and equipment to a laundry list of states.

Libya is now on a path to joining the world as a global citizen. But the process is far from complete. On May 16, 2006 US Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice announced that the US and Libya were initiating normalization of relations. But America has not yet positioned an Ambassador in Tripoli, as normalization is a multistaged process that could drag out for many years if either of the two countries is dissatisfied with the proceedings. Many players are observing the process closely, including the European Union and the UN Security Council. If any major player believes Libya is reneging on agreements or acting in bad faith, the normalization process could be imperiled.

The stakes are very high for Libya, as the nation is desperate to play a dominant role in the global petroleum market, to modernize, and to become a technological leader in the Middle East. At a time when the Gulf States are building large universities modeled after MIT and Harvard, Libya has a per capita gross national income equivalent to US$5,500, is unwilling to provide adult literacy data to the UN, and has a population dominated by children—30% of Libyans are under 14 years of age [1].

It is in Libya’s urgent interests to acquire an image of openness to scientific exchange and expertise. But Libya must demonstrate that, first, it will not use such scientific openness to acquire the capacity to produce weapons of mass destruction, and second, that it will respect the human rights of foreign professionals who work on Libyan soil.

The Benghazi Six

Imprisoned since 1999, the five Bulgarian nurses and Palestinian physicians “confessed” to the crime of working with the CIA to deliberately infect 426 Libyan children with HIV. Their confessions were extracted after extensive torture, some of which was eye-witnessed by a Bulgarian engineer who was jailed simultaneously for 174 days on unrelated charges. On May 16, 2006 the engineer, Smilian Tachev, held a press conference in Sofia, Bulgaria, revealing the conditions to which the Benghazi Six were subjected:

“The nurses were beaten with many-stranded wire, for a long time and painfully,” Tachev said. “Then they were made to run, crawl, stand on one leg with their hands stretched up. When they collapsed totally, they were dragged somewhere and brought back in a helpless state.” Tachev added that he witnessed the use of probes to force unidentified objects down the women’s throats, electrocution, and dogs loosed on the screaming victims [2].

For seven years the nurses and doctor have been imprisoned, facing a sequence of Libyan judicial proceedings, and in 2004 were sentenced to death by firing squad. By all accounts their lives have taken this hideous turn for arbitrary reasons. When it was revealed in 1998 that 426 children that had been hospitalized in a facility in which the Benghazi Six worked were now HIV positive, the Gaddafi government rounded up every foreign-born physician, nurse, and technician employed in the facility. Though local medical personnel decried the unsanitary conditions of the hospital, and blamed reused syringes for the spread of HIV among pediatric patients, the Libyan government charged these six with a crime and released the other foreigners [3]. In early 2006 Gaddafi added another name to the list of alleged criminals—Switzerland’s prominent AIDS researcher Luc Perrin, who had examined some of the infected children and studied their blood samples in his Geneva University Hospital laboratory, years after the Benghazi Six were arrested [4].

Emotions have reached fever pitch among the families of the HIV-infected children. The families have held demonstrations calling for the health-care workers’ executions, burning American and Bulgarian flags. And they have insisted that Bulgaria and the US must make payments to the children’ families that are equal to the amounts Libya paid the Lockerbie victims’ survivors. Bulgaria and the US refuse.

What is At Stake for the Health and Scientific Communities

Meanwhile, the stakes are high for scientists and health-care workers, generally. The world is shy 4.3 million health-care workers, with the greatest deficits being felt in poor countries hard-hit by HIV, tuberculosis, and malaria [5]. If there is any hope of conquering the AIDS pandemic, physicians, nurses, technicians, and scientists must be free to work in countries other than their home of citizenship. In recent years, however, we have witnessed numerous incidents in which governments or religious leaders targeted foreign health professionals as part of larger political schemes: Nigerian imams, for example, claimed American-made polio vaccines contained HIV, spawning a global resurgence of polio [6]. Freedom for the Benghazi Six would move the world towards restoring principles of free movement for legitimate health-care workers and scientists.

Indeed, the HIV-positive children of Libya deserve access to the same quality of medical care as their pediatric counterparts in Europe and North America enjoy. The best way for them to obtain years of quality life is through guarantees that doctors, nurses, scientists, and pharmacists, expert in HIV/AIDS treatment, have safe access to their country and its hospitals.

Libya is fortunate that Bulgaria, then a young post-communist state, did not insist in 1999 that charges be filed with the Biological Weapons Convention. Bulgaria should have done so. After all, Gaddafi claimed that Bulgaria and the US CIA colluded in a fiendish plot to deliberately release a microorganism into the Libyan population. Had the claim been processed as a formal charge, weapons inspectors would have had formal access to blood samples, hospital records, and other vital information that would undoubtedly have cleared the Benghazi Six. Moreover, a signal would have been sent to the world regarding claims of bioterrorism and the burden of their proof [7]. In the event, Libya’s failure to invoke the Biological Weapons Convention to fully investigate the criminal allegations undermines the credibility of Gaddafi’s charges and the convictions of these health-care workers.

It is critical that the scientific community recognize what is at stake in this case: It is your freedom of movement and work; it is the strength and validity of the Biological Weapons Convention; it is Libya’s laudable willingness to remove itself from the list of nations that support terrorism and seek nuclear weapons capability. And it is freedom for six unjustly treated colleagues.

Footnotes
Laurie Garrett is Senior Fellow for Global Health, Council on Foreign Relations, New York, New York, United States of America. E-mail: kschneider@cfr.org
Funding: The author received no specific funding for this article.
Competing Interests: The author has declared that no competing interests exist.
References

h
PLoS Med. 2006 November; 3(11): e514.
Published online 2006 November 21. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.0030514.
Six Imprisoned Health-Care Workers in Libya Are Pawns in a Far Larger Strategic Game
The repercussions are enormous
Laurie Garrett
 
The scientific community, AIDS activists, and the Libyan government would do well to recognize that the political and diplomatic import of the case of the Benghazi Six involves a great deal more than the lives of five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian physician. At stake are some of the most profound political issues of our time: terrorism, nuclear proliferation, the freedom of movement of health-care workers and scientists, and the Biological Weapons Convention. Although human rights advocates rightly decry the physical torture these individuals have been subjected to, and their death sentences, it is critical to recognize that the unfortunate Benghazi Six—Bulgarian nurses Snezhana Dimitrova, Nasya Nenova, Valentina Siropulo, Valya Chervenyashka, and Kristiyana Valtcheva, and Palestinian physician Ahmed Ashraf Al Hadjudi—are pawns in a far larger game.
The Geopolitical Background

In 2003 Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, the longtime leader of Libya, initiated discussions through American and European diplomatic channels signaling interest in placing Libya within the larger world community. Isolated under the labels of “rogue state” and “supporter of terrorism,” Libya was constrained by United Nations sanctions that, among other things, limited that country’s ability to pump and sell its vast oil reserves or to purchase the vital electronics and equipment needed to modernize its oil fields. Breaking those constraints meant renouncing all ties to terrorism and admitting responsibility for the 1988 explosion of Pan Am Flight 103, the jet that crashed into Lockerbie after a bomb placed in the jet’s cargo hold by Libyan operatives exploded, claiming the lives of 270 peope. Gaddafi, after initially denying any Libyan responsibility for the international crime, in 1999 handed over one of his intelligence officers for trial in Scotland, where he remains in prison today.

Pained by the sanctions, in 2003 Libya formally acknowledged to the United Nations Security Council responsibility for the Lockerbie bombing, and began negotiations with representatives of the families of the Flight 103 victims. Libya ultimately paid the families US$2.16 billion in 2005; another US$540 million in promised payment was withdrawn by Libya because the United States Bush Administration maintained the country on its terrorism watch list.

At stake are some of the most profound political issues of our time.

In addition, the Gaddafi government has quietly admitted to working with Pakistani nuclear weapons scientist Dr. Abdul Qadeer (“A. Q.”) Khan. Libya has not only abandoned its nuclear weapons dreams, but has cooperated in international investigations of A. Q. Khan’s dangerous spread of nuclear weapons–related knowledge and equipment to a laundry list of states.

Libya is now on a path to joining the world as a global citizen. But the process is far from complete. On May 16, 2006 US Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice announced that the US and Libya were initiating normalization of relations. But America has not yet positioned an Ambassador in Tripoli, as normalization is a multistaged process that could drag out for many years if either of the two countries is dissatisfied with the proceedings. Many players are observing the process closely, including the European Union and the UN Security Council. If any major player believes Libya is reneging on agreements or acting in bad faith, the normalization process could be imperiled.

The stakes are very high for Libya, as the nation is desperate to play a dominant role in the global petroleum market, to modernize, and to become a technological leader in the Middle East. At a time when the Gulf States are building large universities modeled after MIT and Harvard, Libya has a per capita gross national income equivalent to US$5,500, is unwilling to provide adult literacy data to the UN, and has a population dominated by children—30% of Libyans are under 14 years of age [1].

It is in Libya’s urgent interests to acquire an image of openness to scientific exchange and expertise. But Libya must demonstrate that, first, it will not use such scientific openness to acquire the capacity to produce weapons of mass destruction, and second, that it will respect the human rights of foreign professionals who work on Libyan soil.

The Benghazi Six

Imprisoned since 1999, the five Bulgarian nurses and Palestinian physicians “confessed” to the crime of working with the CIA to deliberately infect 426 Libyan children with HIV. Their confessions were extracted after extensive torture, some of which was eye-witnessed by a Bulgarian engineer who was jailed simultaneously for 174 days on unrelated charges. On May 16, 2006 the engineer, Smilian Tachev, held a press conference in Sofia, Bulgaria, revealing the conditions to which the Benghazi Six were subjected:

“The nurses were beaten with many-stranded wire, for a long time and painfully,” Tachev said. “Then they were made to run, crawl, stand on one leg with their hands stretched up. When they collapsed totally, they were dragged somewhere and brought back in a helpless state.” Tachev added that he witnessed the use of probes to force unidentified objects down the women’s throats, electrocution, and dogs loosed on the screaming victims [2].

For seven years the nurses and doctor have been imprisoned, facing a sequence of Libyan judicial proceedings, and in 2004 were sentenced to death by firing squad. By all accounts their lives have taken this hideous turn for arbitrary reasons. When it was revealed in 1998 that 426 children that had been hospitalized in a facility in which the Benghazi Six worked were now HIV positive, the Gaddafi government rounded up every foreign-born physician, nurse, and technician employed in the facility. Though local medical personnel decried the unsanitary conditions of the hospital, and blamed reused syringes for the spread of HIV among pediatric patients, the Libyan government charged these six with a crime and released the other foreigners [3]. In early 2006 Gaddafi added another name to the list of alleged criminals—Switzerland’s prominent AIDS researcher Luc Perrin, who had examined some of the infected children and studied their blood samples in his Geneva University Hospital laboratory, years after the Benghazi Six were arrested [4].

Emotions have reached fever pitch among the families of the HIV-infected children. The families have held demonstrations calling for the health-care workers’ executions, burning American and Bulgarian flags. And they have insisted that Bulgaria and the US must make payments to the children’ families that are equal to the amounts Libya paid the Lockerbie victims’ survivors. Bulgaria and the US refuse.

What is At Stake for the Health and Scientific Communities

Meanwhile, the stakes are high for scientists and health-care workers, generally. The world is shy 4.3 million health-care workers, with the greatest deficits being felt in poor countries hard-hit by HIV, tuberculosis, and malaria [5]. If there is any hope of conquering the AIDS pandemic, physicians, nurses, technicians, and scientists must be free to work in countries other than their home of citizenship. In recent years, however, we have witnessed numerous incidents in which governments or religious leaders targeted foreign health professionals as part of larger political schemes: Nigerian imams, for example, claimed American-made polio vaccines contained HIV, spawning a global resurgence of polio [6]. Freedom for the Benghazi Six would move the world towards restoring principles of free movement for legitimate health-care workers and scientists.

Indeed, the HIV-positive children of Libya deserve access to the same quality of medical care as their pediatric counterparts in Europe and North America enjoy. The best way for them to obtain years of quality life is through guarantees that doctors, nurses, scientists, and pharmacists, expert in HIV/AIDS treatment, have safe access to their country and its hospitals.

Libya is fortunate that Bulgaria, then a young post-communist state, did not insist in 1999 that charges be filed with the Biological Weapons Convention. Bulgaria should have done so. After all, Gaddafi claimed that Bulgaria and the US CIA colluded in a fiendish plot to deliberately release a microorganism into the Libyan population. Had the claim been processed as a formal charge, weapons inspectors would have had formal access to blood samples, hospital records, and other vital information that would undoubtedly have cleared the Benghazi Six. Moreover, a signal would have been sent to the world regarding claims of bioterrorism and the burden of their proof [7]. In the event, Libya’s failure to invoke the Biological Weapons Convention to fully investigate the criminal allegations undermines the credibility of Gaddafi’s charges and the convictions of these health-care workers.

It is critical that the scientific community recognize what is at stake in this case: It is your freedom of movement and work; it is the strength and validity of the Biological Weapons Convention; it is Libya’s laudable willingness to remove itself from the list of nations that support terrorism and seek nuclear weapons capability. And it is freedom for six unjustly treated colleagues.

Footnotes
Laurie Garrett is Senior Fellow for Global Health, Council on Foreign Relations, New York, New York, United States of America. E-mail: kschneider@cfr.org
Funding: The author received no specific funding for this article.
Competing Interests: The author has declared that no competing interests exist.
References
ttp://www.iht.com/articles/2005/10/14/news/nurses.php

- 作者: onecountry 2007年07月30日, 星期一 11:21  回复(0) |  引用(1) 加入博采

AIDS Policy in Libya
摘要:利比亚艾滋病传播世纪大案——华盛顿邮报的观点 查看全文

- 作者: onecountry 2007年07月30日, 星期一 10:29  回复(0) |  引用(1) 加入博采

博客更新重启~
突然发现已经整整五个月没有更新博客了。从主观方面而言,是我的关注点有所转移,从艾滋病领域,健康领域到了NPO领域。从客观方面来说,离开了红十字会的环境以后,这方面接触的机会和期待都少了不少。
然而但愿今天是个新的开始,从今天以后会坚持以比较高的频率更新这个博客的,以不负读者厚爱吧!

- 作者: onecountry 2007年07月30日, 星期一 10:17  回复(0) |  引用(1) 加入博采

National AIDS Fund

- 作者: onecountry 2007年03月8日, 星期四 17:42  回复(0) |  引用(1) 加入博采