Is their a doctor in the FKN house you can trust that is not
Jewish scum? Arafat's death decree was announced by SHARON,6
months before his death.Didn't USA alot $millions of our money
to Israel to clone virsus and bacteria that was genetic killers
for Arabs and Blacks and Chinesse.?Yah!,not spelled out as such
but we know who they wanted to target,under specific weed
control.
I wonder if any Movie Director has the balls (or tits) to make a
movie on the Killing of Arafat?
Compiled by Daily Star staff ( Chickens!)
Friday, September 09, 2005
Israel reiterated it had not poisoned former Palestinian leader
Yasser Arafat, following media reports on Wednesday on the
content of his medical records. "Israel was not in any way
involved in what happened with Arafat. The Palestinians know
this, the Arabs know this, Arafat's family knows this. But it's
always convenient for certain people to heap accusations on
Israel," said Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom. He urged
the French doctors and Mrs. Arafat to make the records public.
Many senior Palestinian officials have accused Israel of
poisoning their leader - an allegation Israeli officials have
repeatedly rejected.
Wednesday's disclosure of Arafat's hitherto secret medical
records from the French military hospital of Percy revealed that
a "massive brain hemorrhage" had killed the Palestinian leader
last November, although it remains unclear what led to the rapid
deterioration in his health.
Arafat's wife, Suha, and Palestinian officials have never given
a definitive cause of death and kept Arafat's medical records a
closely guarded secret. Mrs. Arafat also rejected calls for an
autopsy.
The medical dossier was initially obtained by the New York Times
and two Israeli media outlets, which conducted separate reviews
of the information. Their investigations gave different
explanations for the cause of the stroke, deepening the puzzle
over his death.
The Times review said poisoning was highly unlikely. It noted
that French doctors conducted a battery of toxicology tests that
came up negative.
The researchers also said Arafat did not suffer the extensive
kidney and liver damage they would expect from poisoning, the
newspaper reported. It also said Arafat's condition improved in
the French hospital, and that he was able to walk and talk with
his associates, before he slipped into a coma last November 3.
Such an improvement would make poisoning unlikely.
"The mystery around Yasser Arafat will only grow bigger and
bigger after reading this report," said Avi Isacharoff, the
Israel Radio reporter who obtained the medical records with the
Israeli daily Haaretz.
Palestinian Foreign Minister Nasser al-Kidwa, Arafat's nephew
and one of few people with access to Arafat and his doctors in
France, said the new reports shed no new light and the cause of
death remains unknown.
The Israeli reporters got the records from an unidentified
senior Palestinian official, then shared the information with
the Times, which conducted its own review. Israeli and American
medical experts were consulted. Isacharoff, who is working on a
book about Arafat's final days, shared the conclusions of the
French report with the AP.
According to the French doctors, Arafat suffered a digestive
ailment about 30 days prior to his death. He also suffered an
"acute" case of a blood disorder, disseminated intravascular
coagulation, or D.I.C., the report said. The report was signed
by Bruno Pats, a senior doctor at the hospital.
The hospital's director, Dr. Jean-Paul Burlaton, refused to
discuss Arafat's medical records. "We did our job at the
appropriate time and so we have no comment to make."
The Times said Arafat's stroke was caused by D.I.C. that stemmed
from an unidentified infection, though it dispelled two
widespread rumored causes of death: AIDS or poisoning.
The Times cited an unidentified Israeli infectious-diseases
expert as criticizing the French medical team for not testing
for AIDS. But the expert said after studying the records, AIDS
was unlikely due to the sudden onset of an intestinal illness.
The Haaretz report, however, quoted Dr. Gil Lugassi, president
of the Israel Hematologists Association, as saying the symptoms
described could be typical of AIDS.
"What is simply unacceptable and seems very perplexing is the
absolute disregard for the possibility of AIDS," Lugassi, one of
the doctors to review the records, was quoted as saying.
Dr. Ashraf al-Kurdi, Arafat's personal physician, asserted that
Arafat had the AIDS virus in his blood. "It was given to him to
cover up the poison," he told the AP.
Kurdi, however, did not say where the AIDS virus or poison had
come from. Kurdi did not join the French medical team and would
not say whether