Pope, Trump wish Peres well as condition stable
Former
Israeli president Shimon Peres remained stable Friday morning three days after
a major stroke, a spokesman for the 93-year-old said, after the Pope and Donald
Trump offered their best wishes.
Israelis
have been watching closely since their elder statesman and last remaining
founding father was hospitalised on Tuesday feeling unwell and then suffered a
stroke and internal bleeding.
His
condition has improved since, but he remained sedated on Friday morning.
“There is
no change at the moment,” a spokesman for Peres said.
“His
condition is obviously still serious but at the moment he is stable.”
Doctors
are hoping it will be possible to take Peres out of sedation in the coming
days, though they are monitoring his condition hourly.
On
Thursday his personal physician and son-in-law Rafi Walden told AFP that during
times when they had taken him out of sedation, he had been able to squeeze his
hand.
He has
not been able to speak due to being intubated, Walden said.
– Letters
from America –
Peres has held nearly every major office in Israel, serving twice as prime minister. He was president, a mostly ceremonial role, from 2007 to 2014.
Peres has held nearly every major office in Israel, serving twice as prime minister. He was president, a mostly ceremonial role, from 2007 to 2014.
He won
the 1994 Nobel Peace Prize jointly with prime minister Yitzhak Rabin and the
late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat for his role in negotiating the Oslo
Accords, which envisioned an independent Palestinian state.
The
former hawk turned dove is widely respected both in Israel and abroad,
regularly meeting world leaders and celebrities.
Pope
Francis wrote to Peres Thursday saying he had “prayed for strength for the
family and for a full recovery.”
The
letter said the Pope held a special prayer for Peres alongside Rabbi Abraham
Skorka of Argentina.
Peres and
the Pope last met two months ago when Peres visited the Vatican, while in 2014
they made a joint prayer for peace alongside Palestinian president Mahmud
Abbas.
US
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump also wrote to wish Peres a “swift
recovery.”
“You are
among the last of a generation of leaders who fought for the right of the
Jewish people to shape their own destiny,” Trump wrote.
Trump’s
Democrat rival Hillary Clinton, former British prime minister Tony Blair and
Russian President Vladimir Putin have also inquired about his condition.
UN
Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon told the body’s Security Council Thursday he was
hoping for a “swift and full recovery,” calling Peres “tireless in seeking
peace between Israelis and Palestinians.”
He said
that unfortunately, despite the goals of the Oslo Agreement, “we are further than
ever from its goals.”
The goal
outlined of a Palestinian and Israeli side living in peace side by side “is at
risk of being replaced by a one-state (Israel) reality of perpetual violence
and occupation.”
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