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WHO Report: I Was Asked To Spy If I Wanted To Study

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1-9-2010
World Health Organization (WHO) – PNN - Ahmed is a medical student. He cannot continue his training at an East Jerusalem hospital because his permit was confiscated. He recounts how the Israeli secret  service asked him to work for them if he wanted his permit back.

 “As part of my studies at Al Quds medical school in Abu Dis, for the last two years I’ve been doing on-the-job training at an East Jerusalem hospital. Being a Palestinian from the West Bank, I need a permit from the Israeli authorities to enter Jerusalem. I’ve never had any problems getting one before. This spring, however, a soldier at the check¬point confiscated my permit. I was told that I had to see the Israeli secret service, Shin Bet, if I wanted to get it back.
 
When I finally got an appoint¬ment a few weeks later, the Shin Bet officer told me: “If you help us, we will help you.” They asked me to inform them about my fellow students’ activities, in particular any travel abroad. In other words, I was asked to spy if I wanted to study. I refused and, as a result, I didn’t get my permit back.

Although I can do my training in Hebron, for example, there are huge repercussions on the quali-ty of my studies. The East Jeru¬salem hospital where I’ve been training has half a dozen profes-sors specialized in my field. In Hebron, there is only one. There is also much less interaction bet-ween students in the West Bank because there are far fewer students per hospital.

When I finish my undergradu¬ate studies at Al Quds medical school in a bit over a year, I want to go to the United States for my specialization. My diploma is recognized in the US, UK, the Arab world and many other countries. Israel, however, refuses to recognize it.”

Al Quds medical school

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150-160 students in the fourth, fifth and sixth year of studies at Al Quds medical school in Abu Dis are eligible for training at East Jerusalem hospitals. 90 percent come from the West Bank and need permits to attend specialized, medical training in paediatrics, neonato¬logy, surgical interventions, in¬ternal medicine, cardiology, etc. On the whole, the same high-quality, specialized training is not available in the hospitals elsewhere in the occupied Pa¬lestinian territory>

Therefore, access to East Je¬rusalem for medical students is critically important, espe¬cially if the quality of medical care in the Palestinian Occupied Territories is to be ensu¬red in the long term.

In June 2010, Al Quds medical school reported that 11 stu¬dents could not continue their training in East Jerusalem because the Israeli authorities had refused to renew their permits. Physicians for Human Rights Israel is helping these students to bring their case to court in order to create a pre-cedent with regard to permits for medical students from the West Bank.

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datum: 08-02-2012 21:01
Dit is een reactie op valasco, die verwijst naar een stuk uit Elsevier.
(ik denk dat hij/zij ...

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datum: 08-02-2012 14:43
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by valasco
datum: 07-02-2012 21:42
Het is opmerkelijk dat ik dit nieuws gisteren voor het eerst, en op een later tijdstip herhaald, zag...
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