Tel Aviv, Thursday
Israeli
former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's health has deteriorated further
with his "vital organs" failing, the hospital where he has been housed
in a comatose state for eight years announced.
"In the
last few days, we have seen a gradual decline in the functioning of
Ariel Sharon's vital organs, which are essential for his survival," Tel
Hashomer hospital director Zeev Rotstein told Israeli public radio.
"His state is classed as critical, meaning his life is in danger," Rotstein said.
"The medical staff and Sharon's family are expecting a turn for the worse," he added.
The
85-year-old's health worsened on Wednesday, as Sharon suffered from
"serious kidney problems" after undergoing surgery, Israeli media
reported.
News website Ynet quoted medical
sources as saying Sharon was taken into intensive care a month ago. His
health then stabilised but suffered a "significant deterioration" in the
past few days.
The long-time leader of the right-wing
nationalist camp in Israeli politics suffered a massive stroke on
January 4, 2006, slipping into a coma from which he has never recovered.
KERRY EXPECTED IN ISRAEL
Israeli
and US specialists said in January 2013 that Sharon had showed
"significant brain activity" in an MRI scan, responding to pictures of
his family seven years after the stroke.
Concern over
the state of Sharon's health comes as US Secretary of State John Kerry
is expected in Israel at the start of a four-day Middle East visit aimed
at securing Israeli and Palestinian agreement on a framework for final
status peace talks.
Sharon was first elected Prime
Minister in February 2001, just months after walking through east
Jerusalem's flashpoint Al-Aqsa mosque compound, revered by Jews as the
Temple Mount, in an action that sparked the second Palestinian uprising.
In
November 2005, he left the right-wing Likud to set up a new party,
Kadima, frustrated by hardliners opposed to his withdrawal of troops and
settlers from Gaza that year and to any further concessions in the
occupied West Bank.
In an extraordinary and
controversial career stretching back more than half a century, the
85-year-old made it his mission to safeguard national security.
DUBBED 'THE BULLDOZER'
He became convinced that Israel needed to separate from the Palestinians and unilaterally determine its own borders.
Born
in British-mandate Palestine on February 27, 1928, to parents from
Belarus, Sharon summed himself up in the title of his autobiography: "Warrior".
Impetuous
and daring, Sharon proved himself an artful soldier and shrewd
politician who pioneered some of the most far-reaching changes in
Israeli history.
While his administration was initially
seen as the most hawkish in Israeli history, less than four years after
his 2001 election, it withdrew troops and settlers from Gaza,
Palestinian territory occupied in the 1967 war.
But
nothing could redeem Sharon in the eyes of his Palestinian foes. Shortly
after his massive stroke in 2006, Hamas said the Middle East would be
better off without him.
Dubbed "the Bulldozer" both for
his style and his physique, Sharon is also remembered by Arabs as the
"Butcher of Beirut" for the massacres of Palestinian refugees at Sabra
and Shatila by a Lebanese militia, while Israeli troops stood by.
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