2 Palestinian clowns offer relief to kids in Gaza hospitals

Updated 23 March 2016
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2 Palestinian clowns offer relief to kids in Gaza hospitals

GAZA CITY: A pair of Palestinian clowns is offering some laughs and relief to children with chronic illnesses at pediatric wards in hospitals in the Gaza Strip.
With no circus or fair in Gaza to offer employment, Majed Kaloub and Alaa Miqdad began reaching out to kids in kindergartens and schools. Now, thanks to the aid of CISS, an Italian non-profit organization, they have found a niche for their work in hospitals, bringing some much needed cheer to sick children.
Neither is formally trained in medical clowning, a profession popularized by American doctor Patch Adams and in which Israel’s University of Haifa offers a bachelor’s degree, but their goal is the same — to raise the spirit of young patients in an already sad part of the world.
“The clown is a supporting tool for the medical doctor,” said Kaloub, 24. “As much as we can, we try to let the child respond to us to reach his heart.”
For Miqdad, a 33-year-old dwarf, the experience has been far more personal. When he was younger, he said he was bullied and teased and for a long time after that, he resisted children.
“The children are all my life now. I do most of the work with them,” he said.
Both started clowning in hospitals in 2014. That summer, they worked with children traumatized by incessant airstrikes during a deadly 50-war with Israel. They performed in damaged neighborhoods and temporary shelters. The experience inspired the clowns to take their act to hospitals where there were children with chronic illnesses.
Hardships remain in the Gaza Strip, an isolated coastal Palestinian territory ruled by the Hamas group and operating under a joint blockade imposed by Israel and Egypt. According to UNICEF, some 300,000 of its 1.8 million residents are in need of emotional and psychological support.
The clowns typically visit three medical centers a week. On a recent visit to Al-Rantisi hospital, children jumped from their parents’ laps to greet Miqdad, even before he put on his clown costume.
In a tiny locker room, Kaloub and Miqdad put on colorful loose outfits over their casual street clothes and applied makeup and a red clown’s nose. Miqdad put on a bright Mohawk wig. They then set off giggles with dancing, magic tricks and bubble-blowing.
“They are beautiful,” said Mohammed Al-Baz, 11, who suffers from a disorder of the brain that can cause epileptic seizures. “They make me laugh every time I come here.”
In the artificial kidney ward, some kids who were hooked up to dialysis machines nearly jumped out of their beds to grab bubbles. Mohammed Shawaf said his three-year-old daughter asks for the clowns even when she is back home from the hospital.
Yousef Al-Muqayyad, a doctor at Al-Rantisi, said the clowns help the staff connect with the young patients. The clowns “break the barrier of fear of the white coat,” he said. “When they would see the white (coat), the children used to scream.”
It’s easy to get attached to the children and the work has taken its toll on both clowns, said Kaloub, adding that they have needed psychological support. “One of the greatest difficulties is that most of the children we see die after we cherish them,” he said. “If we despair, we won’t continue our work.”


Iraqi lawmakers to elect president Tuesday, PM appointment next

Updated 25 January 2026
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Iraqi lawmakers to elect president Tuesday, PM appointment next

  • Parliamentary speaker Haibat Al-Halbussi announced on Sunday that the new parliament will convene on Tuesday to elect a president

BAGHDAD: Iraq’s parliament will meet on Tuesday to elect the country’s new president, who will then appoint a prime minister expected to be Nouri Al-Maliki after he was endorsed by the largest Shiite bloc.
By convention, a Shiite Muslim holds the post of prime minister, the parliament speaker is Sunni and the largely ceremonial presidency goes to a Kurd.
Parliamentary speaker Haibat Al-Halbussi announced on Sunday that the new parliament will convene on Tuesday to elect a president, according to the official INA press agency.
The president will then have 15 days to appoint a prime minister, who is usually nominated by the largest Shiite bloc formed through post-election alliances.
On Saturday, the Coordination Framework alliance — whose Shiiite factions have varying links to Iran — endorsed former prime minister and powerbroker Al-Maliki as the country’s next premier.
The alliance, to which Al-Maliki belongs, spoke of his “political and administrative experience and his record in running the state.”
Kurdish parties have yet to agree on a presidential candidate, who must be endorsed by other blocs and win a two-thirds majority in parliament.
The presidency is usually held by the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK). This year, the rival Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) named its own candidate: Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein.
Although Maliki’s endorsement effectively guarantees him the post, forming a new government remains a daunting challenge that could drag on for months and still fail.
The designated premier has one month to form a government and present it to parliament for a vote of confidence.
The 75-year-old Maliki, a shrewd politician, is set to return to power at a time of seismic changes in the Middle East, as Tehran’s regional influence wanes and tensions with Washington rise.
Government formation in Iraq must balance internal political dynamics and power-sharing among major parties, all under the continued influence of Iraq’s two main allies: Iran and the United States.
A close Iran ally, Al-Maliki will be expected to address Washington’s longstanding demand that Baghdad dismantle Tehran-backed factions, many of which are designated terrorist groups by the US.
Last month, Iraqi officials and diplomats told AFP that Washington demanded the eventual government exclude Iran-backed armed groups, even though most of them hold seats in parliament, and have seen their political and financial clout increase.
But Iraq is struggling with weak economic growth and cannot risk punitive measures by the US, which has already sanctioned several Iraqi entities, accusing them of helping Tehran evade sanctions.