Battling cholera, Lebanon gets first vaccines, and sharp words, from
France
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[November 01, 2022]
BEIRUT (Reuters) - Lebanon took
delivery on Monday of its first vaccines to combat a worsening cholera
outbreak - together with sharply worded criticism of the crisis-hit
country's crumbling public health infrastructure from donor nation
France.
By Sunday, cases of cholera - a disease typically spread through
contaminated water, food or sewage - stood at 1,447, with 17 deaths,
since the first were recorded in the country a month ago, the health
ministry said.
Lebanon had been cholera-free since 1993, but its public services are
suffering under a brutal economic crisis now in its fourth year, while
infighting among the country's faction-riven elite has paralysed its
political institutions.
The outbreak has reached Beirut, but authorities say most cases remain
concentrated where it started in the northern town of Bebnine, where
health authorities have set up an emergency field hospital.
The vaccines would play "an essential role" in limiting the disease's
spread, Health Minister Firass Abiad told reporters in the capital as he
announced the first batch. He did not specify how many more were on the
way.
Standing next to Abiad, the ambassador from former colonial power France
said the delivery comprised more than 13,000 doses donated by her
government, while urging Lebanese authorities to address the outbreak's
causes.
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Health workers attend to suspected
cholera patients inside a field hospital in Bebnine, Akkar district,
northern Lebanon October 28, 2022. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir/File Photo
"The origins of this epidemic, in
which public health is at stake, must also be treated," Anne Grillo
told reporters. The outbreak was "a new and worrying illustration of
the critical decline in public provision of access to water and
sanitary services in Lebanon."
In the Bebnine field hospital, two young boys sat next to each other
on one hospital bed, while a mother waited anxiously to confirm if
her son, lying limp on another bed and being treated by a doctor and
a nurse, had also caught the disease.
Nearby, Syrian children in a makeshift refugee camp played in dirty
water chocked with rubbish and medical waste and fed by an outflow
from an open pipe.
The World Health Organization has linked cholera's comeback in
Lebanon to an outbreak in neighbouring Syria, to where it had spread
from Afghanistan via Iran and Iraq.
(Reporting by Maya Gebeily; editing by John Stonestreet)
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