Cholera
spreads from Iraq to Syria, Kuwait, Bahrain: UNICEF
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[November 06, 2015]
By Isabel Coles
ERBIL, Iraq (Reuters) - A cholera outbreak
in Iraq has spread to neighboring Syria, Kuwait and Bahrain, and risks
turning into a region-wide epidemic as millions of pilgrims prepare to
visit the country, UNICEF's Iraq director said.
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The disease, which can lead to death by dehydration and kidney
failure within hours if left untreated, was detected west of Baghdad
in September and has since infected at least 2,200 people in Iraq
and has killed six.
"It (the outbreak) already has a regional dynamic and the risk of
that can only be increased by people from all over the region coming
into Iraq," UNICEF country director, Peter Hawkins, said on
Thursday. "Kuwait, Bahrain and Syria have already had confirmed
cases."
Millions of Shi'ite Muslims are due to visit Iraq in December for
Arbaeen, a religious ritual marking the end of an annual mourning
period for the Prophet Mohammad's grandson Hussein, whose death in
680 AD entrenched the schism between Shi'ites and Sunnis.
Hawkins said UNICEF was working with clerics in the Shi'ite shrine
cities of Najaf and Kerbala to convey information about how to guard
against cholera, which is endemic in Iraq and the wider region.
The outbreak can be traced to a number of factors including low
water levels in the Euphrates and winter flooding that has
contaminated the river and shallow wells with sewage water.
The war against Islamic State militants who control large swathes of
territory in northern and western Iraq has also contributed to the
outbreak.
The conflict has displaced more than 3 million people, with many
living in camps where conditions are conducive to the spread of
cholera - a bite of contaminated food or a sip of contaminated water
is enough to cause infection.
Hawkins said UNICEF has only limited access to areas controlled by
Islamic State, which swept across the Syrian border in mid-2014 in a
bid to establish a modern caliphate.
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Higher military expenditure and other costs associated with the
battle against Islamist militancy has aggravated a cash crunch for
Iraq, a major OPEC oil producer that has suffered from the drop in
global crude prices over the past year.
A higher proportion of the government budget is also being spent on
security at the expense of other services and infrastructure such as
water supply, Hawkins said.
One in five of the confirmed cases in Iraq is among children, and in
large parts of the country the start of the school year was delayed
by a month as a precaution, UNICEF said in a statement.
In response to the outbreak, UNICEF is providing bottled water, oral
rehydration salts and installing community water tanks, but like
most humanitarian operations in Iraq it is severely underfunded.
(Editing by Louise Ireland)
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