Torture probe targets Gadaffi
2008-08-12 21:38
Paris - French judges are investigating accusations of torture filed against Libyan leader Muammar Gadaffi by a Palestinian doctor held in a Libyan jail for eight years, a judicial official said on Tuesday.
Ashraf al-Hajuj was held on death row along with five Bulgarian nurses on charges of infecting 438 children with Aids-tainted blood.
The six claim to have been tortured into confessing. They were their released in July 2007.
Last year Libya's supreme court converted their sentences to life imprisonment, which together with financial compensation and a promise of stepped-up ties with European countries, paved the way for their return home.
Hajuj filed suit in a French court last December, leading to the opening of an investigation in February for "torture and barbaric acts" and "rape by a person in a position of public authority", the judicial official said.
The French probe targets Gadaffi, five Libyan police officers and a Libyan doctor.
Following his release, Hajuj claimed he had been tortured with electric shocks and with dogs, deprived of sleep and sexually assaulted in jail. He has also taken action against Libya before the UN Human Rights Commission.