The New Zealand Herald

Virus spreads unchecked in Yemen

Spike in deaths exposes extent of outbreak in the war-torn country

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At a cemetery in Yemen’s largest southern city, dozens of fresh graves were a testament to a spike in deaths amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The cemetery workers who bury them don’t know what killed the newly deceased. But there’s no denying that there’s been an increasing number of people getting sick in the port city of Aden — likely from the coronaviru­s.

Many are buried with few precaution­s and only a small number of attendees. Workers wear masks or cover their faces with a cloth.

Mohammed Ebeid, a gravedigge­r in Aden, said there’s been five times the normal traffic, with 51 burials in the last week at the cemetery where he works.

“This is something strange, we’ve never seen it before.”

The internatio­nal aid group Doctors Without Borders has reported a spike in deaths and infections from coronaviru­s, including health workers at a facility it runs in the city. Residents of Aden had previously said several hospitals shut their doors, as healthcare workers feared contractin­g the virus while lacking protective equipment.

The spike has also exposed the extent of the virus’s spread in the wartorn country.

Caroline Seguin, Doctors Without Borders’ operations manager for Yemen, told the AP on Saturday that the mortality rate at its facility treating Covid-19 patients was “very, very high”,” and that a lot of people have arrived “almost dead, or already dead”.

The group, which is known by its French acronym MSF, said in a statement last week that the high number of deaths at its Covid-19 treatment centre in Aden “speaks to a wider catastroph­e unfolding in the city”.

The key southern port has recently witnessed a new chapter of political infighting between government forces and southern separatist­s who declared self-rule last month, leaving health authoritie­s in disarray. The facility had no choice but to turn away patients, said Seguin, because they did not have enough staff and supplies to treat the patients. MSF’s facility is the only dedicated Covid19 centre for all of southern Yemen.

Seguin said at least 40 health workers at the facility were Covid-19 patients or suspected patients, but

MSF couldn’t confirm because of a shortage of tests.

The group said that “as many as 80 people have been dying in the city per day during the past week, up from a pre-outbreak normal of 10”.

Earlier this month, the United Nations said it was extremely concerned by the rapid spread of the virus in Yemen. It said community transmissi­on was going widely undetected, and unmitigate­d in many places, due to the lack of testing.

The Health Ministry of Yemen’s internatio­nally recognised government, which controls Aden, has reported only 212 confirmed cases including 39 deaths in the southern Yemen, which is low.

In the north, which is controlled by the Houthi rebels, the numbers are even lower, but there are reports of unexplaine­d deaths there as well.

So far, the Houthis have reported four cases, including one death of a Somali migrant.

The Iran-backed Houthis captured much of northern Yemen in 2014, including the capital, Sanaa, forcing the government to flee to the south. In 2015 a Saudi-led coalition went to war against the rebels.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Gravedigge­rs in Aden, Yemen, have reported a surge in burials.
Photo / AP Gravedigge­rs in Aden, Yemen, have reported a surge in burials.

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