Zimbabwe restricts gatherings, food vending as cholera cases spike
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[November 27, 2023]
By Nyasha Chingono
HARARE (Reuters) - Zimbabwe's government has started restricting public
gatherings and food vending, while monitoring burials in all areas
affected by cholera, after cases of the disease spiked this week.
New cholera cases in the southern African country trebled from 437 to
1,259 this week, the biggest jump since the latest outbreak of the
water-borne disease started in February. This has triggered panic in
Zimbabwe, where more than 4,000 people died from cholera in 2008.
To date, the country has recorded 155 deaths linked to cholera from
8,787 cases, according to the health ministry. The authorities last week
declared a state of emergency in the capital Harare, which has the
highest number of new infections.
On Friday, residents in Harare's low-income Kuwadzana suburb, where
seven of the capital's 13 cholera deaths were reported, complained about
erratic supplies of clean water, uncollected garbage and raw sewage
flowing in the streets.
Many residents have dug shallow wells to meet their household water
needs.
"The water from the boreholes has also become contaminated. They are
encouraging us to treat the water before drinking and to come to the
hospital if we feel sick," a visibly frail Bertha Rwizi said as she
received treatment at Kuwadzana polyclinic, where the authorities have
set up three emergency cholera treatment tents.
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A health worker disinfects a cholera tent at Kuwadzana Polyclinic in
Harare, Zimbabwe November 24, 2023. REUTERS/Philimon Bulawayo
Health worker Mercy Chiweshe said
clean water was key to treating cholera cases as well as preventing
further infections.
"We are appealing for boreholes because the shortage of water is
affecting us and for residents to maintain good hygiene," she said.
Harare's municipal authorities have been distributing water
treatment tablets to residents as part of efforts to fight the
diarrhoeal disease.
(Reporting by Nyasha Chingono; Editing by Nelson Banya, Olivia
Kumwenda-Mtmabo and Mark Potter)
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