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Zimbabwe
government should declare a national health emergency
Oxfam
International
November 25, 2008
View article
on the Oxfam International website
The government
of Zimbabwe should declare the current cholera epidemic a national
health emergency, international aid agency Oxfam said today, so
that urgent national and international aid can be mobilized to address
the outbreak. The disease outbreak, a result of the breakdown of
basic water and sanitation services, has killed at least 300 people
in the last two weeks, and infected more than 6000 across the country.
"Delay
is not an option as this crisis could rapidly spread with the rainy
season looming. The government of Zimbabwe must acknowledge the
extent of the crisis and take immediate steps to mobilize all available
resources to deal with the epidemic," said Charles Abani, Regional
Director for Oxfam in Southern Africa. "We urgently need international
donors to support all humanitarian plans to tackle the problem."
Ordinary Zimbabweans
are desperately short of food, health care, clean water and safe
sanitation. Cholera, a water-borne disease, has surged due to the
breakdown of city sewerage systems, poor maintenance of water supply
systems including hand pumps, severe drinking water shortages, and
the lack of basic hygiene items such as soap. Oxfam has contracted
10 trucks to transport more than 200 tons of soap and disinfectant
into Zimbabwe.
The crisis is
set to worsen significantly in December, when the rainy season begins.
Cholera is already starting to spread into neighboring countries.
"Our field
assessments show an alarming deterioration of water quality and
supply in clinics and hospitals with virtually none having access
to safe water, and patients often having to supply their own. This
applies equally to urban and rural health centers," said Abani.
Oxfam is:
- Distributing
soap, buckets and water purification tablets to 24 000 people.
- Rehabilitating
water points in Mudzi, a district bordering Mozambique.
- Distributing
1000 hygiene kits in Beitbridge, a town close to where many Zimbabweans
cross the South African border, to families without water and
sanitation. Each kit comprises a 20 liter-capacity jerrycan, 1kg
soap, and aquatabs to purify 160 liters of water.
- Trucking
213 metric tons of soap into Zimbabwe, along with disinfectant
chemicals - 3750 liters of sodium hypochlorite and 550kgs
of calcium hypochlorite, and 288 000 rolls of cotton wool.
"There
have been more than 6000 cases of cholera reported since this epidemic
began. These numbers are conservative however, as they don't include
people who are sick and dying at home, without access to a clinic
or hospital," said Abani.
"Oxfam's
call to the political parties of Zimbabwe, leaders in the region
and to the global community is to deal with this humanitarian crisis,
irrespective of the status of political negotiations. In the interest
of the poorest and most vulnerable Zimbabweans, and of countries
neighboring Zimbabwe, all concerned parties need to hasten a political
settlement."
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