
SOFIA, Aug 10, 2007 (AFP) - Bulgarian medics freed in July after spending more than eight years in a Libyan prison told an investigation commission Friday in Sofia about their torture in jail.
Three of the six former prisoners, two nurses and a doctor, testified about "the psychological and physical torture they endured," according to a source close to the commission.
Their testimony came two days after Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi's son confirmed in a television interview that the six had been subjected to electric shocks during their detention.
The medics, a Palestinian-born doctor who has become a Bulgarian citizen and five female Bulgarian nurses, were convicted of deliberately infecting over 400 Libyan children with the HIV virus at a hospital in Benghazi where they worked.
They were pardoned by Bulgarian authorities when they returned home last month under a compensation deal worked out with the children's families.
The doctor, Ashraf Juma Hajuj, had described how they were "treated like animals" and subjected to electrocution, beatings and sleep deprivation.
Kadhafi's son Seif al-Islam, who helped negotiate the medics' release, acknowledged in an Al-Jazeera television interview broadcast Wednesday that "the question of torture... has been established.
"What the Palestinian doctor said is true and I have given him and his family lots of help."
"There was torture by electricity... they scared them... I mean there was a threat of aggression against his family," Seif al-Islam said.
He said there were "also lies" in the Palestinian doctor's statements, but added "that does not mean there was no torture."
The investigation commission was launched at the beginning of the year to determine whether charges could be filed against Libya on behalf of the six medics.
It was instigated by revelations made by the families of the nurses, who were still on death row in Libya at the time.
Margarita Popova, spokeswoman for the Bulgarian prosecutor's office, said Friday that after the investigation has been completed, charges "may be formulated."
A lawyer who defended the medics at their trials in Libya, Hari Haralambiev, told AFP he expected charges to be filed.
Meanwhile, the source close to the commission said that "all the nurses were not interrogated as the investigators took into account their current health and psychological condition."
The hearings of the former prisoners will resume in September, officials said.
The medics have said they were subjected to "medieval tortures" and that police officers set dogs on them in order to force confessions.
One of the nurses, Nasya Nenova, attempted suicide. She has said she did this as she could not stand the torture.
Hajuj is planning to sue Kadhafi, accusing the Libyan leader of holding him hostage, the Dutch news agency ANP reported Sunday.
The medics have always maintained their innocence, with the support of international experts who have said the HIV infections occurred before their arrival at the hospital and were sparked by poor hygiene.
Bulgaria is writing off Libya's communist-era debt as a contribution to an international fund for the victims.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who helped negotiate their release, has denied accusations he traded it for a nuclear cooperation deal with France and military contracts with European defence firm EADS, which were announced days after the medics' return home.
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