Hindustan Times (Delhi)

3 of family with bat-infested well die, two continue to battle for life

- Ramesh Babu letters@hindustant­imes.com

MENACE Bats living in well at collection agent’s house have been identified as source of virus

THIRUVANAN­THAPURAM: Valachekut­ti Moosa, 62, has lost three members of his family while he and his son’s fiancée are battling for life after getting infected in Kozhikode district’s Changaroth village between May 5 and 19 from what was then termed as a ‘mystery disease’.

The infection, which since then is believed to have caused 12 deaths in Kerala, has been identified as the Nipah virus infection, a rare disease that spreads from animals and has never been reported in the state before.

Moosa, who on Monday was also confirmed to have been infected with the Nipah virus, has lost his sons Mohamed Saliah, 28 and Mohammed Sadiq, 26, and his brother ‘s wife Mariumma, 50. A nurse, Lini, who treated them at a government hospital has died as well.

A collection agent with a small educationa­l institute, Moosa is on life-support with fever and Nipah symptoms. He lost one son to a road accident two years ago.

Among those being treated for the Nipah virus in the state is Atifa, 19, the fiancée of Moosa’s eldest son Saliah, a civil engineer who was about to leave for a job in Qatar. Mariumma had succumbed to the infection on May 19.

“Moosa had asked Saliah to clean the well before he left the country, which he did with the help of his brothers. Little did they know what fate awaited them,” said one of their relatives K Latheef, who runs a small grocery shop in the neighbourh­ood.

The bats living in Moosa’s well have been identified as the source of the outbreak by National Institute of Virology in Pune and the well has been sealed, along with many others in the neighbourh­ood .

Fruit bats are considered to be natural hosts of the virus.

Bats are common in this part of Kerala and have never before been identified as a source of infection. Changaroth residents said bats usually seek small cracks and wedges inside wells to beat the summer heat. Some people cover their wells with nets to keep them out, but most don’t bother.

The infection appears to have spared Moosa’s wife Mariyam and son Muthaleef,, who have shown no symptoms of the disease but have been kept under observatio­n for two weeks, according to World Health Organisati­on protocol

 ?? PTI PHOTO ?? Animal husbandry department and forest officials use a net to collect bats from the well of a house after the outbreak of Nipah virus in Kerala’s Kozhikode district on Monday.
PTI PHOTO Animal husbandry department and forest officials use a net to collect bats from the well of a house after the outbreak of Nipah virus in Kerala’s Kozhikode district on Monday.
 ?? PTI ?? Officials put a bat, removed from the well of a house, in a container in Kozhikode on Monday.
PTI Officials put a bat, removed from the well of a house, in a container in Kozhikode on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India