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| Tuesday, February 9, 1999 Published at 12:15 GMT World: Europe French Aids blood trial opens ![]() Parents who lost two sons to Aids after transfusions arrive for the trial A former French Prime Minister and two of his fellow ministers have gone on trial accused of the manslaughter of five people who died after receiving transfusions of tainted blood.
The BBC's Paris Correspondent, Stephen Jessel, says the trial is unprecedented in French post-war history. Four health officials have already been convicted in previous trials but this is the first time the courts are judging the accountability of top government officials. 'Crucial delays'
His two former colleagues, former Health Minister Edmond Herve and former Social Affairs Minister Georgina Dufoix, are accused of failing to introduce a scheme to heat blood, a process which destroys the virus. They are also accused of failing to stop the collection and distribution of blood which was known to carry risk of contamination.
But it was not until 1 August 1985 that systematic testing of blood donors went into effect in France - on Mr Fabius' orders - using a test made by the French company Diagnostics Pasteur. Unprecedented trial The Court of Justice of the Republic, a special tribunal which allows politicians to be tried by their peers, is meeting for the first time. Its judges are made up of three professional magistrates and 12 deputies and senators, seven of them from parties hostile to Mr Fabius, who is now Speaker of the National Assembly. The seven cases at the heart of the trial are only the tip of the iceberg.
In 1991 an experts' report found that of the 4,000 who contracted the virus, 300 were "avoidable". Olivier Duplessis, whose father and mother contracted the HIV virus after a transfusion, is president of the French Association of Transfusion Recipients. He says the whole of France wants an explanation of how the tragedy was allowed to happen. Political and legal reverberations The trial, expected to last at least three weeks, has profound political, legal and moral implications, including the question of ministerial responsibility. It is the first time since World War II that French ministers have gone on trial for their official acts. The defendants served under the late President Francois Mitterrand in the mid-1980s, a time when the dangers of Aids as a modern-day plague were surfacing for the first time. All three say they never knowingly approved the use of contaminated blood products in transfusions. 'I am innocent' Ms Dufoix said recently: "In my soul and conscience, in the deepest part of my being and before God, I do not feel guilty." Sylvie Rouy, one of the two Aids-infected survivors named in the case, told Lib�ration newspaper: "These people had a duty toward us. "Why did they not hesitate to put industry first, to the detriment of public health? They played with my life." The trio face up to three years in jail and a fine of 500,000 francs ($88,000) if found guilty. |
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