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Sharon in hospital after mild stroke
(AP)
Updated: 2005-12-19 08:09

"Their celebration is a bit premature and exaggerated �� the prime minister is very well," Gissin said.

Sharon grew weak and confused Sunday evening soon after a meeting with former Prime Minister Shimon Peres. The premier was immediately rushed to the hospital in his official vehicle and taken to the emergency room, media reports said. Sharon's sons, Omri and Gilad, rushed to the hospital.

"Initial checks showed he had a mild stroke. and during checks his condition improved. He was always conscious and didn't need any surgical intervention," said Yuval Weiss, the hospital's deputy director.

Goldman said the prime minister did not lose consciousness and was having no problems with his motor skills. He was certain the prime minister would recover fully.

"Unequivocally, there is no damage," Goldman, said. "He had anticoagulant treatment. He will need to be in the hospital for a few days."

If Sharon is incapacitated, Vice Premier Ehud Olmert, a close ally, would take over the day-to-day running of the government.

But Cabinet Secretary Yisrael Maimon said that would not be necessary.

"Because the prime minister is functioning and communicating and talking, there is no relevance to the question of who will act in his place," he told reporters. "He himself asked to be released tonight to go home, and the doctors suggested he stay under observation."

Sharon, a former army general, was elected prime minister in 2001, months after the beginning of nearly five years of Israel-Palestinian violence. Sharon led the Israeli crackdown on the Palestinian uprising and was vilified by many Palestinians.

Then he led Israel's pullout from the Gaza Strip last summer after 38 years of occupation.

Following the Gaza pullout, Sharon threw the Israeli political map into disarray while preparing to run for a third term in office in March 28 elections.

Sharon split from the Likud Party, which he helped found three decades ago, saying it had become too extreme. A group of hard-line Likud lawmakers bitterly fought against Sharon's Gaza withdrawal plan. They lost the battle, but Sharon determined that he could no longer lead the party.

Polls show that Sharon's new party �� which includes more than a dozen former Likud lawmakers �� would finish far ahead of other parties, all but guaranteeing he would form the next government and remain prime minister for a third term.

However, Kadima is built around Sharon, and if he were to fall ill, it almost certainly would suffer a blow in the polls.

Sharon's health and age have always lurked in the background of his term as prime minister. The ex-army general has never released his medical records but has insisted in recent years that he is not suffering from any serious ailments.
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