
Agence France Presse (12.19.06) - Tuesday, December 19, 2006
European Union officials warned Tripoli against carrying out the executions, and EU Justice Commissioner Franco Frattini expressed "great disappointment" with the verdict, which he said could compromise Libya-EU ties.
The European Commission called the verdict unacceptable, said it had "serious concerns" with the trial process, and echoed calls for the decision to be reviewed at higher levels. The EU presidency, now held by Finland, said it "expects" the higher court to find a "just, equitable, and humanitarian" solution.
"The whole court case was compromised," read a joint statement issued by Bulgaria's president and prime minister. "We urge the Libyan authorities to intervene at once, speedily review this ruling, overturn the absurd sentences, and release [the defendants]." Bulgarian Foreign Minister Ivaylo Kalfin, who plans to meet with US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice today, characterized the sentence as "absolutely ungrounded and misleading the Libyan society about the real cause of the tragedy."
The European Union and France are "fundamentally opposed" to the death penalty, said Philippe Douste-Blazy, the French foreign minister. France has played a strong diplomatic role by treating the Libyan children infected by HIV.
The Council of Europe said the ruling deserves "particularly strong and unequivocal condemnation," adding that the only "decent" course is to set the defendants free.
Rights groups have argued defendants' confessions, later recanted, were extracted under torture. "The death penalty is the ultimate cruel, inhuman, and degrading punishment, and in this case it has been imposed after a grossly unfair trial," said the London-based rights organization Amnesty International.
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