Saturday, July 7, 2012

An HIV-positive pop star who infected

An HIV-positive pop star who infected a former lover with the virus has walked free after a German court handed her a two-year suspended sentence on Thursday (local time).

The court in Darmstadt, western Germany, convicted 28-year-old Nadja Benaissa - a member of girl group No Angels - on one count of grievous bodily harm and two counts of attempted bodily harm.

The singer had confessed to having unprotected sex and keeping her virus secret but denied intending to infect anyone during a trial that has sparked a media frenzy in Germany.

The glamorous half-Moroccan singer made an emotional apology during closing arguments, telling the court: "I am sorry from the bottom of my heart. I would love to turn back the clock, but I can't."

The charges against Benaissa could have led to up to 10 years behind bars, but both the prosecutors and the defence argued for a suspended sentence as she had admitted to the crime and said sorry.

Medical experts determined she had almost certainly infected one of her ex-boyfriends with the HIV virus, as they both had a strain of the virus that is relatively rare in Germany.

The man, who was a plaintiff in the case, launched a bitter and scathing attack on the singer during the trial, accusing her of causing "a lot of suffering in this world".

Benaissa found out she was HIV positive when she was 16 and three months pregnant. She had endured a difficult youth up until that point, the court in Darmstadt heard.

She began to fall off the rails at the age of 12, fell in with the wrong crowd and became an habitual user of soft drugs and alcohol.

By age 14 she was a crack addict, living on the streets near Frankfurt station.

After discovering she was HIV positive and pregnant, she tried to turn her life around.

She appeared on a television talent show and was chosen to form part of the group No Angels, which had a string of hits mainly in central Europe.

The all-female band split up in 2003, but reformed in 2007.

They competed in the 2008 Eurovision Song Contest, coming 23rd out of 25 countries.

Benaissa said doctors had told her the risk of transmitting the virus was "practically zero" and she did not want to jeopardise her success by revealing she was HIV positive.

When she was arrested in April 2009 just before performing at a gig in Frankfurt, the media frenzy began.

The case has prompted a debate about trial-by-media and presumption of innocence in a country that - partly for historical reasons - is highly sensitive about privacy.

Respected news magazine Spiegel described the trial as a "witch-hunt" and AIDS organisations expressed their concern that HIV carriers would feel pressured to take sole responsibility for safe sex.

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