UMBETIN, ISRAEL - MARCH 29: Yisra Abu Kef attaches a CPAP breathing pump to her 2 1/2 year old son Muhammad, as some of her other children watch in their home March 29, 2007 in the unrecognized Bedouin Arab village of Umbatin in Israel's Negev desert. The Bedouin Arab boy suffers from Hunter syndrome, a serious genetic disorder that has left him with stunted growth and development, and distorted mouth and nasal features which prevent him from breathing properly and causes severe apnea. Because his village is not linked to the national electricity grid, the Israeli human rights group Bustan has provided his family with a solar-powered system of batteries and the inverter to run the donated CPAP, or Continuous Positive Airway Pressure, machine to help him breath for the next six months until he undergoes an operation to try and reverse the disorder. Getty Images logo Getty Images 32 months ago

UMBETIN, ISRAEL - MARCH 29: Yisra Abu Kef attaches a CPAP breathing pump to her 2 1/2 year old son Muhammad, as some of her other children watch in their home March 29, 2007 in the unrecognized Bedouin Arab village of Umbatin in Israel's Negev desert. The Bedouin Arab boy suffers from Hunter syndrome, a serious genetic disorder that has left him with stunted growth and development, and distorted mouth and nasal features which prevent him from breathing properly and causes severe apnea. Because his village is not linked to the national electricity grid, the Israeli human rights group Bustan has provided his family with a solar-powered system of batteries and the inverter to run the donated CPAP, or Continuous Positive Airway Pressure, machine to help him breath for the next six months until he undergoes an operation to try and reverse the disorder.