Ex-Israeli president in critical condition

Former Israeli President Shimon Peres laughing as he addresses the annual Bastille Day reception at the French ambassador's residence in Tel Aviv on July 4, 2011. The Nobel Peace Prize winner died on September 28, 2016. AFP FILE PHOTO

What you need to know:

  • Concern mounted over the condition of 93-year-old Peres after his stroke on Tuesday that included bleeding.
  • Peres has held nearly every major office in the country, including prime minister twice and president, a ceremonial post, from 2007 to 2014.
  • Peres’s personal physician and son-in-law, Rafi Walden, said the former president’s chances for survival were “pretty good,” with no immediate threat to his life.

RAMAT GAN

Former president and Nobel Peace Prize winner Shimon Peres, the last of Israel’s founding fathers, showed improvement today but remained in critical condition after suffering a major stroke, his doctors said.

Concern mounted over the condition of 93-year-old Peres, widely respected as an elder statesman both in Israel and abroad, after his stroke on Tuesday that included bleeding.

“He is still in a critical condition, stable, but we can see some improvement,” Yitzhak Kreiss, director of the Sheba Medical Centre at Tel HaShomer in Ramat Gan, told reporters outside the hospital near Tel Aviv. He was still sedated and breathing with a respirator, but doctors were seeking to reduce sedation to evaluate him and he was occasionally awake, Kreiss said.

Peres has held nearly every major office in the country, including prime minister twice and president, a mostly ceremonial post, from 2007 to 2014.

A former hawk turned dove, the highlight of his career came in 1994, when he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize along with Yitzhak Rabin and the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat for his role in negotiating the Oslo accords with the Palestinians.

Peres’s personal physician and son-in-law, Rafi Walden, said the former president’s chances for survival were “pretty good,” with no immediate threat to his life. He added that Peres was responsive during treatment.

“When we lessened the sedation, he woke up — not completely but definitely was responsive to our appeals to him,” he told AFP.

“He squeezed my hand and was definitely listening and understanding what was happening.”

Doctors have decided not to operate for the time being.

Zeev Feldman, president of the Israeli Neurosurgical Association and involved in Peres’ treatment, told AFP “the fact that he regained consciousness gives us some cautious optimism.”

“The processes can go wrong in the next 48-72 hours. Some situation may happen and that is why he is in intensive care,” he said.

Peres’s son Chemi told journalists late Tuesday that “we are going to have to take difficult decisions apparently later, but not yet.” “Myself and my family members are going through difficult times, difficult hours,” he said. “I know that my father did not care about anything as much as he cares about people, as much as he cares about Israel, the Jewish people, and the people in Israel,” he said.

“And I will take this opportunity on his behalf to send all of you his love.”

Statements of concern flooded in from across the political spectrum and dozens of journalists gathered outside the hospital, Israel’s largest, awaiting word on his condition.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had spoken with the director of the hospital to receive an update, a spokesman said.

“The prime minister conveyed the prayers of the entire nation for a quick recovery,” his office said.

Netanyahu said on his Twitter account: “Shimon, we all love you”.

President Reuven Rivlin said in a statement he was “following with concern the updates from the hospital, and pray together with the entire people for my friend Shimon’s recovery.”

Opposition leader Isaac Herzog also wished the elder statesman a rapid recovery.

HEART TROUBLE

Nickolay Mladenov, UN special coordinator for the Middle East peace process, said he was praying for Peres, calling him “a patriarch of peace and progress.”

In January, Peres was hospitalised twice for heart trouble. In the first instance, the hospital said he had suffered a “mild cardiac event” and underwent catheterisation to widen an artery.

He was rushed to hospital a second time days later with chest pains and an irregular heartbeat. Peres has sought to maintain an active schedule despite his age, particularly through events related to his Peres Center for Peace. When leaving hospital on January 19, Peres said he was keen to get back to work.

“I’m so happy to return to work, that was the whole purpose of this operation,” he said. In March, he met visiting US Vice President Joe Biden.

Peres once confided that the secret to his longevity was daily gymnastics, eating little and drinking one or two glasses of good wine.

Having earlier hawkishly rejected any compromise with hostile Arab states, he said he was converted after 1977, when Egyptian president Anwar Sadat made a historic visit to Jerusalem, leading to the first Arab-Israeli peace treaty.

Born in Poland in 1923, Peres emigrated to what was then British mandatory Palestine when he was 11.

He joined the Zionist struggle in the 1940s and while hitchhiking met David Ben-Gurion, who would become Israel’s first prime minister.
He became director general of the nascent defence ministry at just 29 years old.

Beyond his accomplishments in the public eye, Peres was also seen as a driving force in the development of Israel’s undeclared nuclear programme.