Gulf News

‘One cholera case every minute in Yemen’

Thousands could die in coming months with up to 300,000 cases predicted — aid agency

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Acholera epidemic raging across Yemen is spiralling out of control, with around one child falling sick every minute, an aid agency warned yesterday.

Thousands of people could die in the coming months with up to 300,000 cases predicted, Save the Children said, adding that the infection rate had tripled in a fortnight.

Two years of civil war, nearfamine conditions and a lack of access to clean water have exacerbate­d the spread of cholera — a diarrhoeal disease that can kill within hours.

The country’s health system — already on its knees — is reeling with hospitals overwhelme­d and quickly running out of medicines and intravenou­s fluids.

The UN children’s agency Unicef said more than 920 people had died from the disease since late April and more than 124,000 cases had been recorded — almost half of them children.

Grant Pritchard, Save the Children’s representa­tive in Yemen, called for an increase in emergency funding to tackle the epidemic.

“It’s time for the world to take action before thousands of Yemeni boys and girls perish from an entirely preventabl­e disease,” he said in a statement.

“Disease, starvation and war are causing a perfect storm of disaster for Yemen’s people. The region’s poorest country is on the verge of total collapse, and children are dying because they’re not able to access basic health care.”

Yemen’s war has left 19 million people needing humanitari­an aid with many on the verge of famine as a Western-backed Arab coalition helps the country’s legitimate government reclaim territory overrun by the Iran-backed Al Houthi militia.

More than two million children are acutely malnourish­ed making them particular­ly vulnerable to cholera as their weakened systems are less able to fight off disease, Save the Children said.

A nurse at a Sana’a cholera unit said there was one day when they had received more than 550 cases. “Every hour we receive patients. We work here 24 hours. People come from all governorat­es across the country,” the nurse added. “I have come across many sad stories.”

 ?? AFP ?? A child receives treatment for a suspected cholera infection at Sabaeen Hospital in Sana’a on Tuesday.
AFP A child receives treatment for a suspected cholera infection at Sabaeen Hospital in Sana’a on Tuesday.
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