The Jerusalem Post

Good-hearted

Israel saves sick Kurdish children despite Erdogan

- • By JUDY SIEGEL

Following the criticism by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan over Israel’s support for the Kurds, Regional Cooperatio­n Minister Tzachi Hanegbi visited Kurdish children who were receiving medical treatment here on Monday.

During a visit to Holon’s Wolfson Medical Center, the base for the Save a Child’s Heart program that performs congenital heart surgery on needy children from abroad, Hanegbi said: “Israel is the greatest defender of human rights.”

The minister was accompanie­d by ministry director-general Dr. Joseph Dreznin. After being greeted by Wolfson doctors, Hanegbi and Dreznin toured the pediatric wards and met with children from Afghanista­n, Togo, Zanzibar and the Palestinia­n Authority as well as from Kurdistan in Iraq.

Hanegbi said he was impressed by the constructi­on work at the children’s hospital and the work being carried out by the Internatio­nal Center for Pediatric Cardiothor­acic Surgery at Wolfson. Constructi­on on the children’s hospital, funded by Hanegbi’s ministry, will significan­tly improve the treatment conditions for the children of Holon, Bat Yam, south Tel Aviv and Jaffa, he said. It will also enable the Save a Child’s Heart organizati­on to save many other children from around the world, he added.

To date, the ministry has funded the life-saving treatment of about 500 children with heart diseases from Iraq, the Palestinia­n Authority, Syria and Jordan.

“Israel is committed to the sanctity of human life wherever it is, and its aspiration to shape a better Middle East that promotes solidarity, concern for others and partnershi­p across borders is clearly expressed in the Wolfson project,” Hanegbi said.

When the Kurdish independen­ce issue was recently discussed in the cabinet, Hanegbi said: “While there are those who criticize Israel’s activity, reality proves that the State of Israel is the greatest defender of human rights and the principle of equality and will continue its efforts to assist them.”

Over the years, doctors and nurses volunteeri­ng for Save a Child’s Heart have treated more than 4,400 children from Africa, South America, Europe, Asia and the Middle East. They have also trained more than 100 medical workers in those countries, allowing them to save many other children.

 ??  ??
 ?? (Courtesy Regional Cooperatio­n Ministry) ?? REGIONAL COOPERATIO­N MINISTER Tzachi Hanegbi visits a mother and child at the Wolfson Medical Center in Holon yesterday.
(Courtesy Regional Cooperatio­n Ministry) REGIONAL COOPERATIO­N MINISTER Tzachi Hanegbi visits a mother and child at the Wolfson Medical Center in Holon yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel