There have since been more than one million suspected cases of
cholera in Yemen, and 2,275 recorded deaths, the WHO says.
The disease is spread by faeces in sewage contaminating water or
food, and it can kill because patients quickly lose fluids through
vomiting and diarrhea.
Caught early it can be treated with oral rehydration salts.
The oral vaccination campaign, which began in four districts in Aden
on Sunday targeting 350,000 people, coincides with the rainy season,
which health workers fear could spread the disease further.
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"The first four districts are being targeted ... and then the
campaign will move towards all the areas at risk in the country,
covering at least four million people," Lorenzo Pizzoli, WHO cholera
expert, said in a tweet posted on Sunday.
Yemen's war, a proxy conflict between Iran-aligned Houthis and the
internationally recognized government of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour
Hadi, which is backed by a Saudi-led alliance, has killed more than
10,000 people since 2015.
It has also displaced more than 2 million and destroyed much of the
country's infrastructure, including the health system whose workers
have not been paid.
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Nevio Zagaria, the WHO representative in Yemen, told Reuters in
April that some 1.4 million vaccine doses had been shipped via
Nairobi, out of 4.4 million planned. [nL5N1RG2AQ]
"The rainy season is starting, so we need to use the window of
opportunity to start a vaccination campaign," he said at the time.
In July 2017, the International Coordinating Group on Vaccine
Provision - which manages a global stockpile - earmarked one million
cholera vaccines for Yemen. But the WHO and local authorities
together to scrap a vaccination plan on logistical and technical
grounds.
Some senior Houthi health officials have been known to object to
vaccinations, delaying the campaign, aid workers say.
(Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay; editing by John Stonestreet
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