Libya Says EU Unfair
Updated on: 22.01.2007, 10:57
Published on: 21.01.2007, 19:02
Libya will not accept the "unfair" European demands to free the medics because this would mean interfering in the judiciary, Libya's foreign minister said.
"The independence of the Libyan judicial system is a red line, being part of our independence and sovereignty, and we can never accept interference in its affairs," said Foreign Liaison and International Cooperation Minister Mohammed Abdel-Rahman Shalgam.
"No one in Libya can interfere in the work of the judicial system, not even the Leader of the Revolution himself," Shalgam, speaking to the Libyan General Peoples Congress or parliament, said on Saturday in reference to Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.
The European parliament urged EU states on Thursday to review ties with the oil-rich north African country and step up pressure to secure the early release of the five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor.
The death sentences were condemned by Western governments and rights groups.
The six have appealed to the Supreme Court, and a ruling is expected in the next few weeks.
"The stances of some European countries, regarding the court's ruling in this case, are unfair"
Mohammed Abdel-Rahman Shalgam
"On the one hand, they (European countries) request the transparency and fairness of the judiciary, but when they see the fairness and transparency of judiciary, they demand the state's interference in the work of judiciary," he said.
"Libya has made contacts with regional and international organizations, being a member of these organisations, to take a stand in facing this European unjust stance," he said without elaborating.
Shalgam noted in his speech that the sentences were not the last word in the case, with a decision by the Supreme Court still to come, then another by the High Judicial Council, a body chaired by the justice minister.
"The High Judicial Council alone is the one to ratify the court's rulings," Shalgam said.
Some Western scientists blame negligence and poor hospital hygiene for the HIV outbreak and say the medics are scapegoats.
But in Libya the case has aroused much anger and the verdict was seen as a welcome act of defiance of the West.