Raed Arafat

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Raed Arafat
رائد عرفات
Minister of Health
In office
7 November 2012  21 December 2012
President Traian Băsescu
Prime Minister Victor Ponta
Preceded by Victor Ponta interim
Personal details
Born (1964-05-27) May 27, 1964
Damascus, Syria
Citizenship Romanian, Syrian
Nationality Palestinian
Alma mater UMF Cluj-Napoca
UMF Târgu Mureș
Profession Doctor
Cabinet Ponta
Religion Islam

Raed or Rayed Arafat (born May 24, 1964) is a Syrian-born Romanian intensive care physician of Palestinian origin. An anesthesiologist, he is the founder of Mobile Emergency Service for Resuscitation and Extrication (SMURD), as well as the coordinator of Mureș County. He is also the Minister of Health since 7 November 2012, after serving as Under-Secretary of State for Health in the Romanian Government.[1]

Early life

Arafat was born in Damascus to a Palestinian couple from Nablus. He worked as a volunteer in emergency medicine from the age of 14.[2][3] In 1981 he emigrated to Romania and initially settled in Pitești, where he took Romanian language classes.

Education

Arafat enrolled at the University of Medicine and Pharmacy in Cluj-Napoca.[2][3] He later moved to the Târgu Mureș University of Medicine, where he underwent specialization in anesthesiology.[3][4] He completed a number of specialist courses abroad, training with the Paris Fire Brigade, the United States National Guard, and the Norwegian Air Ambulance.[4]

Career

Following the 1989 Revolution, Arafat contemplated leaving for France, but his application was rejected,[2] so he concentrated instead on creating an emergency service in Târgu Mureș (which he originally financed with personal funds).[2]

In 1991, he created SMURD, a mobile emergency service which began collaborating with the Romanian firefighting service[2] and the Fire service of Scotland,[3] working for it as a volunteer until 1998, when he gained Romanian citizenship.[2][3]

Politics

In late 2005, his project to have SMURD function as an additional rescue service at a county level was passed into law, but raised opposition from the physician and Social Democratic politician Sorin Oprescu, who had drafted an alternative proposal.[5] A reference to Arafat as "the Ayatollah of Romanian emergency medicine" and the stress he placed on the latter's country of origin brought Oprescu to the attention of the National Anti-Discrimination Office.[5]

[6] A first aid instructor, he coordinated international lectures on the matter in several countries (including Austria, Denmark, Greece, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Ireland, the United Kingdom, and the United States).[4] In 2003, he was made a Knight of the National Order of Merit of Romania (a Grand Officer since 2005).[4]

Since August, 2009, he has held the position of Under-Secretary of State for Health.[7] He resigned from this position on January 10, 2012, as he expressed criticism on the health system reform.[8] After a series of protests in several cities,[9] the government announced changes to the reform plan, and Dr Arafat returned to his post as Under-Secretary of State.[10]

References

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