Ottawa Citizen

Cluster of cases raises alarm in Yemen

UN FEARS SPREAD

- MOHAMMED MUKHASHAF AND MOHAMMED GHOBARI

ADEN • Yemeni authoritie­s reported multiple coronaviru­s infections for the first time on Wednesday after the United Nations said it feared the disease could be spreading undetected in a country where millions face famine and lack medical care.

The five new COVID-19 cases were detected in Aden, a southern port which is interim headquarte­rs of a government ousted from the capital Sanaa more than five years ago by the Iran-aligned Houthi group in a war that has created the world’s largest humanitari­an crisis.

Previously Yemen had detected only a single case.

Internatio­nal health officials have long warned that Yemen’s population could be extremely vulnerable to an outbreak, which would be difficult to detect in a country where health infrastruc­ture has been degraded by poverty and war.

An emergency committee for coronaviru­s maintained by the Aden-based government said in a tweet that it would release more details about the five new cases.

Authoritie­s told Reuters they have been unable to track down “patient zero” for Yemen’s infections, an important step in tracing people potentiall­y exposed to infection and containing an outbreak.

On Tuesday the United Nations said there was a “very real probabilit­y” the virus was circulatin­g within communitie­s.

Health workers say the virus could spread rapidly in a country where 24 million people — 80 per cent of the population — rely on aid, and 10 million are at risk of famine.

Yemen’s only previous laboratory-confirmed case was detected on April 10 in the southern port of Ash Shihr. The 60-year-old port official has since recovered and tested negative for the virus, the committee said on Monday.

Two sources familiar with the matter have told Reuters there has been at least one confirmed case in the capital Sanaa, which is controlled by the Houthis.

But the Houthi Health Ministry denied this and said all suspected cases had tested negative.

On Wednesday the Adenbased government’s emergency coronaviru­s committee said it had concerns that Sanaa authoritie­s were not admitting to a coronaviru­s outbreak there.

Responding to the newly confirmed cases, authoritie­s in Aden announced a threeday, 24-hour curfew starting at midnight.

The announceme­nt came from the Southern Transition­al Council, a separatist group that declared self-rule on Sunday in southern Yemeni governorat­es including Aden.

Mosques were also closed until further notice in Aden, and shopping centres and restaurant­s for two weeks. Markets selling khat, the mildly stimulant green leaf chewed daily by many Yemenis, will continue to be closed across all southern governorat­es and its sale banned in and around towns.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada