New Straits Times

LOMBOK BATTLES WITH MALARIA

Authoritie­s declare health emergency after 137 people infected

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AMALARIA outbreak has infected at least 137 people in Indonesia’s West Lombok after the island was rocked by a series of earthquake­s in recent months, an official said yesterday.

The quakes and aftershock­s since July have killed about 500 people and forced hundreds of thousands into evacuation shelters or tents.

As a result, the number of malaria cases is twice as high as in the same period last year, prompting the West Lombok government to declare a health emergency. Among the 137 infected are babies and pregnant women.

The government has taken steps to prevent the disease from spreading, such as taking blood samples, distributi­ng mosquito nets and fogging.

Amaq Aniyah, 65, was diagnosed with malaria after feeling unwell for a week.

His house was destroyed by a 6.9-magnitude quake last month and since then, he has been living in a tent.

Paramedics have given him a mosquito net.

“Ideally, we should give mosquito nets to everyone but because we only have a few, we have to be selective,” said paramedic Farlin, who like many Indonesian­s goes by one name.

The head of West Lombok regency, Fauzan Halid, said they only had 3,000 mosquito nets but needed 10,000.

Declaratio­n of a health emergency will allow West Lombok to seek 3.4 billion rupiah (RM952,000) in aid from the provincial and central government to tackle the crisis.

Indonesia’s rainy season is expected to start next month, raising fears malaria-carrying mosquitos could breed in stagnant water.

 ?? AFP PIC ?? An Indonesian woman infected with malaria recuperati­ng at a clinic in Gunung Sari, West Lombok, recently.
AFP PIC An Indonesian woman infected with malaria recuperati­ng at a clinic in Gunung Sari, West Lombok, recently.
 ??  ?? Dalai Lama
Dalai Lama

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