A Syrian boy suffering from bone cancer may not be able to travel to the US and receive treatment, as result of Donald Trump’s Muslim travel ban.

Mohammad Alkhaled, a six-year-old Syrian refugee currently living in Jordan, has been diagnosed with Ewing Sarcoma, a type of cancer that forms in bone or else soft tissue.

Jayne Fleming, a New York-based lawyer who works with refugees, told Reuters she was working to get the boy resettled in the United States before the ban was announced last Friday.

The boy’s father appealed to Mr Trump: ‘The whole world has abandoned the Syrian people’ (Reuters)

Earlier this month, Ms Fleming contacted David Tishler, a paediatric oncologist at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, and asked him to review copies of the youngster’s medical records.

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“Where he is they have very little experience treating cancer, they don’t have the resources,” said Mr Tishler. He said that particular strain of cancer requires a year of intensive chemotherapy in addition to surgery and radiation, which is extremely expensive.

Jihad Alkhaled, the boy’s father, made an emotional appeal to Mr Trump, asking him to either lift the ban on people from Syria and six other countries entering the US, or else make an exception for such extreme cases.

“I want to tell Donald Trump that the Syrian people have always been peaceful people,” he said.

“The whole world has abandoned the Syrian people. All I care about is my son’s treatment. I pray to God that Trump will have mercy on these children.”