Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
June 23, 2004 His Excellency Mu'ammar al-Gaddafi Leader of the Revolution Office of the Leader of the Revolution Tripoli Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya Dear Your Excellency al-Gaddafi: As leading virologists and other scientists and physicians, we join our health professional colleagues internationally in calling on you urgently to commute the death sentences imposed by the Benghazi Criminal Court in Libya on five Bulgarian nurses and one Palestinian physician. We also respectfully ask your government to review the procedures that have led to the targeting of these foreign health workers in this affair. The individuals have been charged and convicted of deliberately infecting more than 400 children with HIV while working in al-Fateh Children’s Hospital. Prominent independent scientific experts have concluded, however, that the systematic infection was not perpetrated by those accused. Many of the children were infected prior to the arrival of these health practitioners, and the evidence further shows that unsanitary health conditions are to blame. It is an unfortunate reality that in many countries throughout the world, particularly those in Africa and Asia, inadequate health conditions, training, and care can hasten the spread of HIV/AIDS. Those sentenced to death are Kristiana Malinova Valcheva, Nasya Stojcheva Nenova, Valentina Manolova Siropulo, Valya Georgieva Chervenyashka, Snezhanka Ivanova Dimitrova, and Ashraf Ahmad Jum’a. Libyan authorities took an appropriate step in investigating the cause of the nosocomial HIV infection at al-Fateh Children’s hospital when the Gaddafi Foundation appointed Professor Vittorio Colizzi, who is with the Tor Vegatta University in Rome, and Professor Luc Montagnier, co-discoverer of HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, as international scientific consultants. However, we believe the Benghazi Criminal Court has disregarded the explicit findings of these prominent physicians and has proceeded without a firm grasp of the scientific realities. After several trips to Libya, which included a comprehensive and thorough investigation of the al-Fateh Children’s hospital, Drs. Montagnier and Colizzi highlighted the unlikelihood of a deliberate injection by the accused health workers and concluded that “all the genetic analyses performed strongly indicate that the nosocomial infection in Benghazi Children’s Hospital has been caused by a single. . . subtype of A/G HIV-1...by one. . . HIV infected child who was originally infected by his mother through vertical transmission. This infection was already present in the Benghazi Hospital in April 1997 [before the foreign health workers arrived]. . . and was still operating in March 1999.” Dr. Montagnier’s assertion that the infections were caused by poor medical conditions is consistent with the international community’s recognition that unsterile medical equipment can and does transmit HIV. Outbreaks with similar causes have been documented in Egypt, Romania, and the Kalmyk Autonomous Region of Russia. In fact, according to the World Health Organization, it is estimated that 260,000 HIV infections occur each year because of medical injections given with unsterile needles and syringes. When HIV infections are transmitted through medical procedures or other unsterile conditions at health facilities, the transmissions do not occur because of ill will on the part of health care workers. Rather, the causes tend to be systemic to the health facility or health systems, including improper training of health workers, a high workload, insufficient supplies, or inadequate infection prevention and control procedures. That more than 400 children at al-Fateh Children’s Hospital were infected with HIV is truly tragic. However, accusing health professionals of deliberately infecting the children with HIV, contrary to the evidence, and sentencing these health professionals to death, will not help protect other patients from a similar fate. Policies that promote strong infection prevention and control regime will provide significant protection. We believe it is critical that Libyan authorities, with international assistance as needed, investigate and determine the conditions at al-Fateh Children’s Hospital that enabled these children to become infected, and ensure that such conditions no longer exist at that or any other Libyan health facility. The World Health Organization’s Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean can be contacted to assist with the investigation or direct the Libyan authorities to those who are best positioned to do so. We are glad to hear that most of the children infected with HIV at al-Fateh Children’s Hospital are still alive, and that Libyan authorities are providing for their treatment at home and abroad. Children, like adults, can be successfully treated with anti-retroviral medication, keeping them alive for many years. Due to the scientific evidence and to credible reports that the health workers were tortured into false confessions, we believe that the defendants have suffered extreme prejudice in their case. Accordingly, we urge the Libyan authorities to dismiss the case, and to release to their home countries the imprisoned medical personnel who were invited to your country to help treat the sick. We urge you to ensure that these health professionals are protected, given any medical attention they may need, and are not further abused while still in detention. Sincerely, Michael Adler, MD, FRCP Professor of Medicine University College London ENGLAND Arash Alaei, MD Co-director, Pars Curative Researchers Institute for HIV/DU/STI Shaheed Beheshti University of Medical Sciences Co-director, TB/HIV International Programs National Research Institute of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease Tehran & Kermanshah IRAN Kamiar Alaei, MD Co-director, Pars Curative Researchers Institute for HIV/DU/STI Shaheed Beheshti University of Medical Sciences Co-director, TB/HIV International Programs National Research Institute of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease Tehran & Kermanshah IRAN John G. Bartlett, MD Johns Hopkins University Baltimore, MD USA Stephane Blanche, MD Unité d Immunologie-Hematologie Departement Hospital Necker-Enfants Malades Paris FRANCE Rafael E. Campo, MD Infectious Diseases Research Unit Division of Infectious Diseases University of Miami School of Medicine Miami, FL USA Vittorio Colizzi, MD, PhD Professor, University of Tor Vergata Rome ITALY Douglas T. Dieterich, MD Vice Chair and Chief Medical Officer The Mount Sinai Medical Center New York, NY USA Jan Desmyter, MD, PhD Rega Instituut Leuven BELGIUM Aida Seif El-Dawla, MD Professor of Psychiatry, Ain Shams University Founding Member, El Nadim Center for Psychological Rehabilitation of Victims of Violence Chairperson, Egyptian Association against Torture Cairo EGYPT Wafaa El-Sadr, MD, MPH Harlem Hospital Center Columbia University New York, NY USA Robert C. Gallo, MD Director, Institute of Human Virology and Division of Basic Science University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute Baltimore, MD USA Ashley T. Haase, MD Regents’ Professor and Head, Department of Microbiology Director, AHC Biomedical Genomics Center Director, Minnesota Division, Great Lakes Regional Center for AIDS Research University of Minnesota Minneapolis, MN USA Daniel R. Kuritzkes, MD Associate Professor of Medicine Harvard Medical School Vice-President, Board of Directors HIV Medicine Association Cambridge, MA USA Professor Thomas Lehner, CBE, MD Professor of Basic and Applied Immunology Guy's King's and St Thomas' Hospitals King's College London ENGLAND Haytham Manna, MD, PhD Board of Directors, Arab Commission for Human Rights FRANCE Abdallah Mansour, MD Director, El Nadim Centre for Psychological Management and Rehabilitation of Victims of Violence Cairo EGYPT Moncef Marzouki, MD Associate Professor of Public Health University of Paris FRANCE Kenneth Mayer, MD Director, Brown University AIDS Program Professor of Medicine and Community Health, Brown University Medical Research Director, Fenway Community Health Boston, MA USA Luc Montagnier, MD, PhD Co-founder, World Foundation for AIDS Research and Prevention Co-director, Program for International Viral Collaboration FRANCE Jeffrey Nadler, MD Director, Clinical Research, Division of Infectious Diseases University of South Florida College of Medicine Tampa, FL USA Dr. Rafael Nájera Chief, Department of Viral Pathogenesis National Center for Microbiology Instituto de Salud Carlos III Madrid SPAIN Jumana Odeh, MD, MPH Director, Palestinian Happy Child Centre WEST BANK AND GAZA Mobeen Rathore, MD Chief, Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases/Immunology Professor and Assistant Chairman for Research and Academic Affairs Department of Pediatrics University of Florida Health Sciences Center Jacksonville, FL USA Douglas D. Richman, MD Professor of Pathology and Medicine Director, Center for AIDS Research Florence Seeley Riford Chair in AIDS Research University of California San Diego La Jolla, CA USA Michael Saag, MD Professor of Medicine Director, AIDS Outpatient Clinic University of Alabama at Birmingham Birmingham, AL USA Robert T. Schooley, MD Tim Gill Professor and Head, Division of Infectious Diseases Director, Colorado Center for AIDS Research University of Colorado Health Sciences Center Denver, CO USA Valerie E. Stone, MD, MPH Associate Chief, General Medicine Unit Director, Primary Care Residency Program Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston, MA USA Anita Vaughn, MD Medical Director, Homeless Healthcare Clinic Newark Department of Health and Human Services Newark, NJ USA Paul Volberding, MD President, HIV Medicine Association Professor of Medicine and Vice Chair of Medicine University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) Co-Director UCSF-GIVI Center for AIDS Research Chairman of the Board, International AIDS Society-USA San Francisco, CA USA Hans Wigzell, MD, PhD Director, Karolinska Institute SWEDEN S. Bruce Williams, MD University of New Mexico School of Medicine Albuquerque, NM USA