Rima's case caught the attention of US Special Representative for International Negotiations and Middle East Envoy Jason Greenblatt.
A Palestinian father has been challenging the Palestinian Authority over denying his daughter treatment in Israel. 
Journalist  Fathi Sabbah's daughter Rima suffers from a form of blood cancer. She  was one of the thousands of Palestinian patients affected by the PA's  decision to stop funding medical treatment in Israel for its citizens.  The cessation of services went into effect on March 26.
 According to the news website Days of Palestine, Sabbah was promised by  PA prime minister Mohammed Shtayyeh that he would personally follow  Rima's case to make sure that she would receive the treatments she  needs. Shtayyeh contacted Sabbah via telephone after he shared his story  on Facebook.
However, the medical referral that Rima received to  be treated at Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem only covered a checkup and  not the medications she needed, according to the report.
More  than 20,000 permits used to be granted to Palestinians living in the  West Bank to enter Israel and receive treatment or support a patient who  was receiving treatment in the Jewish state, according to numbers  released to The Jerusalem Post by the Coordination of  Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) in an interview earlier  this year. That number was up by nearly 3,000 from the year before.
The  coordinated cooperation was put to an end by the PA when Israel  implemented the "Pay-for-Slay" Law in February, which instructs the  state to deduct and freeze the amount of money the PA pays in salaries  to imprisoned terrorists and families of "martyrs" from the tax money it  collects for the PA. Afterward, the authority announced it would stop  providing its citizens with medical treatment in Israel, and committed  to finding alternative opportunities of healthcare. 
Rima's case  caught the attention of US Special Representative for International  Negotiations and Middle East Envoy Jason Greenblatt.
 Read more at JPost




 
			 
  
		 
		
	 
    		 
    		 
    		 
    		 
    		 
    		 
    		 
    		 
    		 
    		 
    		 
    		 
    		 
    		 
    		 
    		 
    		