Credit: Reuters/Eliana Aponte
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon attends a ceremony completing the sale of Bank Leumi to a private U.S. investment group in his office in Jerusalem January 4, 2006.
Reviled by Arabs over his war record and viewed with a mix of respect and suspicion by many Israelis, 85-year-old Sharon has been on life support at Sheba Medical Center near Tel Aviv for eight years.
His condition worsened sharply this week, with doctors reporting a life-threatening collapse of vital organs.
'It looks like the situation is not getting better, and we know what usually happens in such situations,' Zeev Rotstein told reporters on Friday. Asked whether Sharon was in his 'final days', Rotstein said: 'I personally feel so.'
Sharon's two sons were at his bedside, doctors said, and a state funeral was planned.
One of Israel's most famous generals, Sharon left his mark on the region through military invasion, Jewish settlement building on captured land and a shock, unilateral decision to pull Israeli troops and settlers out of the Gaza Strip in 2005.
Rotstein described Sharon's decline as steady.
'He is comfortable at this time. To the best of our understanding he is not suffering, such that we do not have to take any action to prevent him suffering,' Rotstein said.
(Writing by Dan Williams; editing by Crispian Balmer)
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