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| Felix Umansky, the chief neurosurgeon treating Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, briefs reporters at the Hadassah hospital in Jerusalem January 9, 2006. (Xinhua/Reuters) | JERUSALEM, Jan. 10 (Xinhuanet) -- Doctors at
Jerusalem's Hadassah Hospital treating Ariel Sharon are to further reduce his
sedation on Tuesday, one day after his right arm and right leg responded to pain
stimulation.
The hospital began to reduce Sharon's sedation Monday
morning,after which the prime minister began breathing on his own,although he
was still hooked up to a respirator.
Hadassah Director Shlomo Mor-Yosef said on Monday that
Sharon's blood pressure rose during the stimulation, which was a positive sign.
However, doctors cautioned that Sharon's condition
remained critical, and it could be days before they could assess the extent of
damage to his functioning from the massive stroke he suffered last week.
Medical consensus was that even if Sharon survived
the massive stroke, he could hardly return to Israeli politics, which he helped
shape after withdrawing troops and some 8,500 settlers from all Gaza in
September and ending Israel's 38 years of occupation there.
Sharon's death or incapacitation will cast
uncertainty over the prospects for his newly founded Kadima party in the March
28 elections, which he is poised to win as head of the centrist party.
His bowing out of politics will also halt peace momentum
raised by Israel's land concession, which is key to the Palestinian demand for a
viable and independent state.
Before his hospitalization, Sharon intended to
concede more occupied land but vowed at the same time to hold on to larger
settlement blocs in the West Bank. Enditem |