Home>News Center>World
         
 

'Brain dead' Arafat kept on life support
(Agencies)
Updated: 2004-11-05 08:44

Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat was "brain dead" and breathing only thanks to artificial life support systems, a French medical official said after conflicting reports as to whether he was alive or dead.

File photo of Palestinian President Yasser Arafat at a Palestinian police march in Gaza, July 8, 2000 to celebrate the sixth anniversary of his return to the Palestinian self rule area in 1994 and the founding of the Palestinian police.  [Reuters]

In strictly technical terms, Arafat was "not dead," the source said on condition of confidentiality, adding that the 75-year-old leader had slipped into an irreversible coma and could only be maintained in his vegetative state through ventilation machines.

The information followed a short statement by a senior French military official who said "Mr Arafat is not dead".

The Palestinian Authority president's condition was "complex," General Christian Estripeau, spokesman for the French defence forces' medical service, told reporters outside the military hospital outside Paris which had been tending to Arafat.

"The patient's condition needs appropriate treatment which required his being transferred to a unit suited to his pathology on the afternoon of Wednesday November 3," he said. He refused to take questions, but said his statement had been prepared according to the wishes of Arafat's wife, Suha.


File photo of U.S. President Clinton with Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin (L) and PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat after the signing of the Israeli-PLO peace accord, at the White House September 13, 1993. [Reuters]
The announcement capped a whirlwind chain of events during which several reports -- including one from Luxembourg's Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker -- said Arafat was dead.

Juncker, speaking at an EU summit in Brussels, said that Arafat had died. Israeli media had also reported the Palestinian leader's death.

"Mr Arafat passed away a quarter of an hour ago," Juncker told reporters. His aides later retracted the statement.

Confirmation of brain death, or encephalic death, is a medical precondition to declaring a patient dead, although he or she may still show signs of life maintained artificially on a life support system.

Electroencephalograms (EEG), or brain scans recorded at intervals of four hours, and/or an arteriography showing absence of blood flow in the brain form the criteria enabling doctors to confirm irreversible brain death.


File photo showing Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak (R) as he jokingly pushes Palestinian President Yasser Arafat (C) into the Laurel cabin on the grounds of Camp David, as U.S. President Bill Clinton watches, during peace talks on July 11, 2000. [Reuters]
Clinical criteria must also be added: these are total loss of consciousness and spontaneous activity, disappearance of all reflexes of the spinal column -- for example the pupils not reacting to light, no reflex closing of eyelids when the cornea is touched -- and finally absence of spontaneous breathing.

French President Jacques Chirac, who made an half-hour visit to the Percy Military Training Hospital where Arafat had been admitted on October 29, refused to answer journalists' questions as to whether Arafat was dead.

Palestinian officials in Paris and the West Bank spent the day first denying that Arafat was in a coma and then that he had died, but said their leader was in a "critical condition" in the hospital's intensive care unit.

Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qorei told reporters at his West Bank headquarters in Ramallah that Arafat "is not in a coma".


Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat greets wellwishers prior to his departure from the West Bank town of Ramallah in this picture released by the Palestinian Authority Friday Oct. 29, 2004. Arafat left for Paris, France, to seek urgent medical treatment for a serious illness. [AP Photo]
"There have been examinations and results are positive," he said without elaborating.

"It is wrong. If the president was dead, the whole world would know," Palestinian communications minister Azzam al-Ahmed told AFP.

"But it is true that he is a very critical condition," he added.

French medical sources said Arafat's health suddenly and dramatically deteriorated Wednesday while he was undergoing tests to determine the cause of an illness which prompted his medical evacuation to France.

A diagnosis of the illness has not been revealed.

Palestinian officials said weekend tests had ruled out leukaemia or other cancers that might have explained the symptoms suffered by Arafat, who had low levels of blood platelets needed for blood clotting.

In Washington, newly re-elected US President George W. Bush said "God bless his soul" when told by a reporter of the unconfirmed reports that the Palestinian leader had died.

A US State Department official later said: "The latest we have from the French is that he is in a critical but semi-conscious state."

He added: "It's not looking good."

A French medical source said an EEG was carried out on Arafat Thursday -- itself "a sign of extreme gravity" -- and that there was no reading of any cerebral activity.

France has long supported Arafat in his 40-year struggle for Palestinian statehood, and Chirac was said to have made the decision personally to provide hospital treatment for him.

Arafat was said to have been well enough Wednesday to welcome Bush's winning a second term, and, according to one of his aides, said he hoped for a jumpstart to the moribund Middle East peace process.

Arafat's departure on October 29 from his battered West Bank headquarters had sparked intense speculation about his eventual successor, but officials insist there is no power vacuum.

In Arafat's absence, Qorei has taken over as acting head of the Palestinian Authority, while former premier Mahmud Abbas is temporarily heading the PLO and Arafat's dominant Fatah faction.

Abbas had been expected to visit Arafat Thursday, but officials in Ramallah said his trip to France was cancelled.

Several dozen people gathered outside the Percy military hospital late Thursday in a tribute to Arafat.

Supporters of Arafat placed portraits of the Palestinian leader at the scene, unfurled Palestinian flags and lit candles in his honour, part of a ritual that first began when Arafat entered the hospital.

Several people said they were ready to spend the whole night outside the hospital, "waiting for news" according Fatima Bena, who had come to pay homage with dates and hot coffee.



 
  Today's Top News     Top World News
 

Nation likely to be 3rd largest trading power

 

   
 

Nutritional imbalance plagues people

 

   
 

Mine blast kills 33, injures 6 in Henan

 

   
 

Coal mining: Most deadly job in China

 

   
 

Shen and Zhao win Cup of China

 

   
 

Consumer price remains stable in October

 

   
  Police lose control of Mosul amid uprising
   
  Arafat buried in Chaotic scenes in West Bank
   
  U.S. may use Iraq meeting to engage Iran
   
  Bush vows second-term push for Palestinian state
   
  Dutch to withdraw troops from Iraq in March
   
  Haiti PM orders arrest warrant against Aristide
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
Doctors deny reports of Arafat's death
   
Arafat reported clinically dead; PM denies
   
Palestinian leader Arafat in coma -Aide
   
Arafat in intensive care undergoing tests
   
Arafat takes turn for worse, aides say
   
Arafat improving, watching US elections
   
Aide: Arafat does not have leukemia
  News Talk  
  Are the Republicans exploiting the memory of 9/11?  
Advertisement