The Star Malaysia

Disease fears mount after Africa cyclone

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BEIRA: Disease is threatenin­g to aggravate the already dire conditions facing millions of survivors following the powerful tropical cyclone which ravaged southern Africa 10 days ago, officials warned.

Cyclone Idai smashed into Mozambique’s coast unleashing hurricane-force wind and rain that flooded swathes of the poor country before battering eastern Zimbabwe – killing 705 people across the two nations.

Amid the ongoing crisis, Zimbabwean television ZBC on Sunday reported that a young woman had given birth while sheltering from the floods in a tree.

Speaking at a briefing in Beira, 1,000km northeast of the Mozambique capital Maputo, Lands Minister Celso Correia said it was now “inevitable that cases of cholera and malaria will arise”.

The UN Office for the Coordinati­on of Humanitari­an Affairs’ deputy head, Sebastian Rhodes Stampa, also at the briefing, warned that disease outbreaks in inaccessib­le areas could be “really problemati­c”.

The World Food Programme said on Friday that the humanitari­an disaster unfolding in Mozambique was on a par with the situation in Yemen and Syria.

Aid workers from across the world are continuing to arrive in the region to bring help to hundreds of thousands of affected people across an area of roughly 3,000sq km.

Survivors are struggling in desperate conditions with some still trapped on rooftops and those rescued in urgent need of food and medical supplies.

“The government is already setting up a cholera treatment centre to mitigate cholera. We should not be frightened when cholera issues arise,” added Correia, describing efforts to control the emerging humanitari­an crisis.

“It is normal. It’s almost inevitable. Malaria, we know how it arises. We have lots of wetlands and we’re going to have malaria that is sure to come up (there).”

More than two million people have been affected in Mozambique, Zimbabwe and Malawi where the storm started as a tropical depression causing flooding which killed 60 and displaced nearly a million people. Hundreds are still missing in Mozambique and Zimbabwe.

In its daily update, OCHA said 74,600 women impacted by the cyclone are pregnant and around 60% of them are due to give birth within the next six months.

At least 7,460 of them are at risk of life-threatenin­g complicati­ons.

The Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross said it had recorded some cases of cholera so far but the UN was unable to confirm the reports.

Much of the area hit by the cyclone remains disconnect­ed from electricit­y supplies, complicati­ng rescue efforts at nightfall.

As many as 109,000 people are living in shelters across central Mozambique, many of them located in and around Beira.

Those shelters also “run the risk of infectious disease such as diarrhoeal disease and measles”, James McQuen Patterson, Unicef’s health and nutrition chief, said.

“Further, as many families have lost everything, some sleeping in the open, the risk of pneumonia, particular­ly among children, increases considerab­ly,” he said.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Life goes on:A woman fetching water from a stream in the aftermath of Cyclone Idai in Chipinge, Zimbabwe.
— Reuters Life goes on:A woman fetching water from a stream in the aftermath of Cyclone Idai in Chipinge, Zimbabwe.

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