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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Health Crisis - Focus on Cholera and Anthrax - Index of articles
UN agency warns of potential cholera outbreak in Zimbabwe
UN News
Centre
August 20, 2009
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=31820&Cr=Zimbabwe&Cr1
The conditions
that led to the worst cholera outbreak in Zimbabwe's history
last year, including poor water and sanitation infrastructure, remain
and the disease could return this year, an official with the United
Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) warned today.
The Southern African
nation recorded around 100,000 cases of cholera and more than 4,000
deaths between August 2008 and July 2009.
Over 90 per cent of Zimbabwe's
62 districts were infected with the water-borne disease and more
than 60 per cent of deaths occurred in rural areas where limited
or no treatment was reaching the local population.
"Unfortunately,
the conditions that produced last year's outbreak and the
outbreaks in the five or six years previously every rainy season
are still largely there," UNICEF Representative Peter Salamah,
said in an interview with UN Radio. "So we are really doubling
our efforts this time to prepare for that eventuality."
According to the UN Office
for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), 6 million people
in Zimbabwe have limited or no access to safe water and sanitation
in rural and urban areas.
"Urban municipal
councils can't purchase the water treatment chemicals required
to make the water safe for urban populations and that's been
one of the real drivers of the cholera outbreak in recent years,"
said Mr. Salamah.
"The other issue
is the breakdown in piping - piping of water, but also sewage
piping, so much so that in some parts of the country open sewage
is mixed with water, causing, of course, huge problems with diarrhoeal
disease."
Mr. Salamah said humanitarian
agencies have been working "around the clock" with the
Government on key efforts to prevent another cholera outbreak. UNICEF
is preparing by pre-positioning non-food items, such as safe water
containers and chlorine tablets, and by educating people about the
disease, which is caused by contaminated food or water.
In June UN agencies and
their partners requested $718 million to address humanitarian needs
in the country, including boosting access to clean water, and providing
food aid and education. To date, some 53 per cent of that appeal
has been funded.
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