Newsflash

Britain was U.S. President George W. Bush's main ally in the March 2003 U.S.-led occupation of Iraq.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki was quoted on Monday as saying it was time for British soldiers to leave the south of the country because they were no longer needed there.

Maliki told The Times newspaper in an interview there might still be a need for their experience in training Iraqi forces and on some technological issues, but the emphasis was now on business links.

He said "the page has been turned".

"The Iraqi arena is open for British companies and British friendship, for economic exchange and positive cooperation in science and education," he said.

Britain was U.S. President George W. Bush's main ally in the March 2003 U.S.-led occupation of Iraq.

Britain has 4,100 troops in Iraq at present.


Reuters

 
Home arrow News Headlines arrow Paralysed Palestinian girl fights against Israel order
Paralysed Palestinian girl fights against Israel order PDF Print E-mail
Wednesday, 09 July 2008

  

Two years ago, Maria was paralysed from the neck down when Israel missile stroke the car she was travelling in Gaza as her mother, grandmother and older brother were killed.

Paralysed from the neck down in an Israeli attack, six-year-old Palestinian Maria Amin is fighting an order to move her from a rehabilitation centre in Israel to the occupied West Bank.

Maria can move around in a wheelchair controlled by a joystick she guides with her chin, but her Israeli doctors say her life would be in danger if Israel's Defence Ministry sends her to the West Bank city of Ramallah.

 

The Defence Ministry, which has covered Maria's medical expenses and sponsored her father and younger brother to live with her at a Jerusalem hospital, has been seeking since last year to send her to Ramallah's Abu Raya Rehabilitation Centre.

Maria's father, Hamdi, appealed against the decision, but on Tuesday Israel's Supreme Court put off for a third time a hearing on the case until December, when an injunction blocking her transfer to the Ramallah facility expires.

Adi Lustigman, Maria's lawyer, told the court that the Abu Raya Rehabilitation Centre lacks adequate equipment to attend to her special needs.

"She needs to live near the hospital, she must be near the emergency room -- things she cannot have in the West Bank," Lustigman told reporters outside the courtroom.

"Maria cannot have her mother, brother or grandmother back, she cannot have her body, but there are things we can do to make things better and this is to take care of her for all of her life because she cannot survive outside Israel," Lustigman said.

Upset at foot dragging, Maria's father said he believed the court did not want to set a precedent that can tell other Palestinians hurt in Israeli attacks to seek medical treatment in Israel.

Reuters

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 09 July 2008 )
 
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