LONDON, May 21 (AFP) - One of the two British nurses jailed in Saudi Arabia over the murder of a colleague will publicly accuse the other of the killing, British tabloid The Daily Mail reported on Friday. Lucille McLauchlan will make the allegation in a documentary screened on Britain's private Channel 4 television station made for the first anniversary of the nurses' release, said the daily. McLauchlan's claim comes just six months after she published a book based on her prison diaries, "Trial By Ordeal: One Nurse's Hell in a Saudi Jail", which made no mention of any such accusation. McLauchlan went to work in Saudi Arabia's King Fahd hospital, where she and fellow British nurse Deborah Parry were arrested over the 1996 death of Australian colleague Yvonne Gilford. They were reportedly detained when caught using Gilford's cash card after she was stabbed 13 times, battered and suffocated at the military hospital. Saudi authorities convicted McLauchlan of being an accessory to murder and sentenced her to eight years jail and 500 lashes. Parry escaped a possible death sentence after the dead woman's brother accepted cash payment, or "blood money," provided for under Islamic law. Both nurses claimed to have been tortured into making confessions which they later recanted and the case attracted huge media interest in Britain. In May, the Saudi authorities commuted their sentences and the pair were allowed to return home after a total of 17 months in jail. Both nurses continue to deny that they were involved in the murder of Gilford. Parry resumed nursing work in a British hospital, while McLauchlan returned to her native Scotland, where she was sentenced to community service for stealing a patient's cash card at a hospital before leaving for Saudi Arabia. -=-=- 