Medical files released for the first time Thursday portray Yasser Arafat
as a robust 75-year-old whose sudden health crisis, a month before his
mysterious 2004 death, was initially blamed on viral gastroenteritis.
The treatment notes by Arafat's Arab doctors who cared for him at his West Bank compound before he was airlifted to France are part of a renewed push to find out what killed the Palestinian leader.
For
years, little was heard about official Palestinian efforts to uncover
Arafat's cause of death. An investigation by the Arabic satellite TV
channel Al-Jazeera, in collaboration with Arafat's widow, Suha, has put
new pressure on Arafat's successor, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas,
to be seen as vigorously searching for the truth.
Last
week, Switzerland's Institute of Radiation Physics said clothing and
personal items used by Arafat in his final days showed elevated traces
of the radioactive agent polonium-210. The items were provided by Mrs.
Arafat and sent to the lab by Al-Jazeera. The findings, though
inconclusive, revived Palestinian claims that Arafat was poisoned.
Some
Palestinian officials have charged that Israel poisoned Arafat. Israel
has repeatedly denied the charges over the years, saying it would not
have been in Israel's interest to kill him, though it blamed him for
Palestinian violence. An Israeli official dismissed the renewed
allegations as "ludicrous."
Mrs. Arafat, who
refused to consent to an autopsy immediately after her husband's death,
has lived abroad for years and is estranged from most of the Palestinian
leadership.
Abbas and his aides have sent conflicting messages about their intentions.
Earlier this week, senior Palestinian official Saeb Erekat said Abbas made a final decision to allow an autopsy.
On
Thursday, members of a committee investigating Arafat's death were less
forceful. Justice Minister Ali Mohanna said Arafat's nephew, Nasser
al-Kidwa, asked for the full report from the Swiss lab, and a decision
on further testing would only be made after reviewing the report.
While
backtracking on an autopsy, Arafat's doctors for the first time
released their detailed treatment notes covering the 18-day period when
they cared for him at his Israeli-besieged West Bank compound before he
was airlifted to a French military hospital on Oct. 29, 2004.
Based
on the doctors' report and later test results in France, Arafat had
escaped many of the chronic afflictions, like diabetes, common in his
age group. A non-smoker, he weighed 150 pounds. He was taking medication
for chronic tremors whose cause was not explained further. They wrote
that he suffered from a gallstone and had vitiligo, a loss of
pigmentation of the skin.
Arafat's downward
spiral began just before midnight on Oct. 11, 2004. Two hours after a
late supper, he vomited but had no other complaints, the report said.
His
doctors diagnosed him with viral gastroenteritis. He improved with
medication and went about his daily routine, and four days later even
joined in the dawn-to-dusk fast of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.
But
there was persistent vomiting and diarrhea, and he began feeling
weaker. His blood platelet count dropped, and on Oct. 28, his medical
team — by now consisting of doctors from Tunisia, Egypt, Jordan and
Palestine — decided to send him abroad. The next morning, he was flown
to France, where he died on Nov. 11, 2004.
An
Israeli specialist, Dr. Joseph Zimmerman, who reviewed the Ramallah
medical file at the request of The Associated Press, said Arafat's early
symptoms were not consistent with viral gastroenteritis.
"I
don't think that this common garden-variety viral infection would
progress to such an extent and result in a fatality," said Zimmerman, a
senior physician at Hadassah University Hospital in Jerusalem.
Zimmerman
said poisoning seemed unlikely, even by a radioactive agent such as
polonium-210. He pointed out that Arafat's platelet counts dropped
suddenly and stayed low and that he eventually exhibited signs of liver
dysfunction.
"This is not typical of poisoning," Zimmerman said, adding that a bacterial infection could have caused these symptoms.
French
doctors said Arafat died of a massive stroke and suffered from a blood
condition known as disseminated intravascular coagulation, or DIC. The
records were inconclusive about what brought about the DIC, which has
numerous possible causes, including infections and liver disease.
Parts
of Arafat's French medical file were also posted Thursday on the
website of the Yasser Arafat Foundation, though key elements had been
published in the past.
At Thursday's news
conference, one of Arafat's physicians, Dr. Abdullah Bashir, said he
believes the available medical data points to poisoning, but would not
elaborate.
Bashir released a 2010 exchange of
letters with the French hospital in which his request to get more
information on toxicology was turned down.
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