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Health Crisis - Focus on Cholera and Anthrax - Index of articles
Disaster
unit deployed in response to cholera outbreak
IRIN News
November 05, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=81314
Zimbabwe has
activated its national disaster response agency, the Civil Protection
Unit (CPU), to counter the spread of cholera.
President Robert Mugabe's
government has stopped short of declaring a national disaster, although
the CPU is usually deployed in the wake of national disasters, such
as floods and droughts.
The government said that
in the past seven days nine people had died nationally from cholera,
an easily treatable waterborne disease, but unofficially the numbers
are thought to be much greater.
CPU director Madzudzo
Pawadyira told Zimbabwe's local media that the agency had been mandated
to provide clean water, even though this was the responsibility
of the state-owned Zimbabwe National Water Authority (ZINWA). "We
are coming in to help with the provision of water," he said.
The capital, Harare,
including its central business district, has been without piped
water for the past four days, while sewer bursts are being left
unrepaired, resulting in raw sewerage running in the streets.
ZINWA confirmed that
it has been pumping untreated sewage into Harare's water supply
dam, Lake Chivero; when supplies are accessible, the water coming
out of the taps often emits a pungent smell.
The UN children's agency,
UNICEF, and the World Health Organisation have been assisting in
the provision of drinking water, while the CPU is setting up cholera
clinics in the capital's high-density suburbs and has embarked on
educational programmes to prevent the disease from spreading.
A ban on vending food
in public places has been imposed, and the shallow wells people
have dug to get to water when the taps stopped running are being
decontaminated; refuse, which has not been collected this year,
will now be collected, the CPU said.
According to Harare's
health director, Stanley Mongofa, "I can safely say we have
been admitting a number of people suffering from the disease but
no deaths have been recorded. Some might have died in their homes
[that] we are not aware [of]."
Clinics
at capacity
An IRIN correspondent
visited Harare's Beatrice Road Infectious Diseases Hospital this
week, where 15 people had reportedly died from cholera, and found
the facilities were stretched, with patients being treated in the
hospital grounds because there were no more beds available.
"Some TB patients
have been evacuated and the place is now catering for cholera patients.
We are aware that the government is understating the number of patients
who have died from cholera," a health worker, who declined
to be named, told IRIN.
"We are looking
at a very serious health disaster, whose effect the authorities
may soon not be able to handle because it appears to be an uncontrollable
outbreak," the health worker said.
Sesel Zvidzai, secretary
for local government in the opposition Movement for Democratic Change,
said ZINWA should cede the control of water supplies to local authorities,
who had previously performed the task.
"ZINWA is not in
a position to maintain water and sewer equipment, since they do
not have engineers; all the engineers have deserted the water authority
because of poor salaries."
Zvidzai said Masvingo
in southeastern Zimbabwe, the only town that still retained control
of its water treatment and distribution, had not suffered any cholera
outbreaks because of the efficiency of its water management authority.
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