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  • Dr Leonid Roshal, the Russian Paediatrician,Chief Negotiator During

    NewRatings.com
    Dec 20 2004

    Dr Leonid Roshal, the Russian Paediatrician who was Chief Negotiator
    During the Beslan Siege, is Named Reader's Digest '

    Monday, December 20, 2004 7:01:00 PM ET
    PRNewswire


    LONDON, December 20 /PRNewswire/ --

    Russian paediatrician Dr Leonid Roshal, who acted as an intermediary
    during the Beslan school siege last September, is to receive the
    Reader's Digest European of the Year Award 2005 for his tireless and
    dedicated work helping children who have been injured in disasters
    and conflicts around the world.

    Dr Roshal was chosen by the Editors-in-Chief of the 18 European
    editions of Reader's Digest magazine, which reach 4.2 million
    subscribers. The Reader's Digest European of the Year is awarded to
    the person who in the Editors' opinion best embodies the contemporary
    expression of Europe's values and traditions. The award will be
    presented to Dr Roshal at a ceremony in Moscow on 19 January 2005.

    Dr Roshal, 71, is head of the Moscow Scientific Research Institute
    for Emergency Children's Surgery and Traumatology and founder of an
    international aid organisation which aims to rescue children in
    trouble. Over the last two decades, thousands of young people with
    horrific injuries have benefited from his specialised emergency care.


    He has also become a hero in his own country. When terrorists seized
    School Number One in Beslan in September, they asked for Dr Roshal to
    act as mediator. This wasn't the first time he had been called on as
    an intermediary. Dr Roshal had gained international renown in 2002
    for the crucial role he played when the Dubrovka theatre in Moscow
    was seized by Chechen terrorists and he managed to negotiate freedom
    for some of the hostages.

    Within 30 minutes of arriving in Beslan he was speaking to the
    terrorists and implored them, in vain, to allow in food, water and
    medicines. Over the next two days he served as main negotiator and
    alerted nearby hospitals for possible casualties. On the third day a
    powerful explosion inside the school triggered a savage gun battle
    with the special forces outside. According to official figures 379
    people died, including 171 children and 30 terrorists. A further 700
    hostages were injured, but thanks to Dr Roshal's and his colleagues'
    meticulous medical preparation all received medical attention within
    two hours.

    Dr Roshal's international aid work started in 1988 when he and 34
    doctors from Moscow's hospitals volunteered to help the relief effort
    following the devastating 1988 earthquake in Armenia.

    Since then his work has taken him to more than two dozen major
    incidents on four continents, including the first Gulf War, Romania,
    former Yugoslavia, Nagorno Karabakh, the US, Egypt, Japan,
    Afghanistan, Turkey, India and Algeria.

    The full story of Dr Roshal's remarkable achievements, written by
    contributing editor Brian Eads, is published simultaneously in all
    European editions of Reader's Digest in January.

    Dr Roshal is the tenth winner of the Reader's Digest European of the
    Year award, worth EUR5,000.

    A high resolution photograph to accompany this release is available
    to the media free of charge at www.newscast.co.uk (+44-207-608-1000)

    Reader's Digest
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