Zimbabwe declares cholera
emergency in capital after death toll rises to 20
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[September 11, 2018]
HARARE (Reuters) - Zimbabwe declared a
cholera outbreak in the capital Harare after 20 died from the disease
and more than 2,000 people were infected after drinking contaminated
water, new Health Minister Obadiah Moyo said on Tuesday.
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Harare city council has struggled to supply water to some suburbs
for more than a decade, forcing residents to rely on water from open
wells and community boreholes.
The latest cholera outbreak came after burst sewers in Budiriro and
Glenview suburbs contaminated water in boreholes and open wells,
which are used by residents, said Moyo, who was flanked by Harare’s
new mayor and other health officials.
"We are declaring an emergency for Harare. This will enable us to
contain cholera, typhoid and whatever is going on. We don’t want any
further deaths," Moyo said after touring a hospital treating
patients in the capital.
The health minister said the selling of meat and fish by vendors in
the affected suburbs had been banned and the police had been asked
to enforce the ban.
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Moyo said the government had suspended classes at some schools in
two suburbs at the epicenter of the outbreak and had also asked for
help from the United Nations agencies and private companies to
supply portable water.
Zimbabwe suffered its biggest cholera outbreak in 2008 at the height
of an economic crisis when more than 4,000 people died and another
40,000 were treated after being infected.
(Reporting by MacDonald Dzirutwe; Editing by James Macharia)
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