The Borneo Post

5 die as pneumonic plague resurfaces in Madagascar

-

ANTANANARI­VO: Pneumonic plague has killed five people in Madagascar since August, a top health official told AFP on Thursday, but stressed the situation was under control.

“We have detected 22 suspected cases of pneumonic plague, including five deaths,” said senior health ministry official Willy Randriamar­otia.

“There have been no deaths since Monday,” he said, adding that there was widespread panic in the eastern region of Tamatave “which has not seen the plague for 100 years.” Plague killed millions of people across the world in earlier centuries.

The fi rst death in Madagascar’s recent outbreak came on Aug 28 when a passenger in a bush taxi died en route to Tamatave.

Two others who came in contact with the passenger also died, while two more people succumbed to the disease in the province of Antananari­vo. About 300 people have been treated so far for plague, the health ministry said.

There have been outbreaks every year in Madagascar since 1980, especially fuelled by rats fleeing forest fi res.

Plague can be cured with antibiotic­s, but can be fatal within 24 hours if it affects the lungs.

The high incidence of the plague in the country has been attributed to a combinatio­n of factors, including poor hygiene and insufficie­nt healthcare. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia