Gulf Today

Flood-borne diseases claim 9 more lives

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KARACHI: At least nine more people died from water-borne diseases that have atacked tens of thousands of displaced people living in areas devastated by the floods, officials said on Tuesday, warning they risked losing control of the spread of infections.

Hundreds of people may have died from diseases spreading ater the flooding, authoritie­s in the southern Sindh region said, with villagers there saying potable water shortages meant they were drinking and cooking with flood water.

“There is already the diseases outbreak,” said Ahsan Iqbal, the planning minister, who is also heading a national flood response centre jointly run by the government and the military.

“We fear it may get out of control,” he told a news conference in Islamabad.

An intense and long monsoon dumped around three times as much rain on Pakistan than on average in recent weeks, flooded large swathes of the country. The torrential monsoon was a one in a hundred-year event likely made more intense by climate change, scientists say.

The death toll from the deluge itself has touched 1,559, including 551 children and 318 women, which does not include the disease deaths, the country’s disaster management agency said.

The World Health Organisati­on (WHO) has said the “wave of disease and death” has a “potential for a second disaster” following the flooding.

Standing water enables mosquitoes to breed and spread vector-borne diseases such as malaria and dengue, it said.

As flood waters spread over hundreds of kilometres start to recede, which officials say may take two to six months, stagnant waters have led to diseases like malaria, dengue fever, diarrhoea and skin problems, mainly in Sindh — the worst hit by the floods.

The Sindh provincial government said nine people died of gastroente­ritis, acute diarrhoea and suspected malaria on Monday. It has reported a total of 318 deaths from diseases since July 1.

The report said over 72,000 patients were treated on Monday at make shit or mobile hospitals set up in flood-hit regions.

Over 2.7 million people have been treated at these facilities since July 1, the report said.

Three other provinces have also reported thousands of such cases.

The influx has overwhelme­d the country’s already weak health system. Sindh provincial government has said that over 1,200 medical facilities were still marooned in floodwater.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? ±
A flood-affected family sits under the shade of a cot bed in Dera Allah Yar on Tuesday.
Agence France-presse ± A flood-affected family sits under the shade of a cot bed in Dera Allah Yar on Tuesday.

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