The family of Schabir Shaik is not paying particular attention to the Jacob Zuma hearing.
Cholera kills 412: UN
Article By:
Sat, 29 Nov 2008 07:50
Cholera has killed 412 people in Zimbabwe to date and the disease is
also spreading into neighbouring Botswana and South Africa, the United
Nations warned Friday.
A total of 9908 cases have been recorded in the impoverished
southern African country, the UN Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs said, raising an earlier toll of 389 dead out of
9463 affected.
Warning of "alarming regional dimension," it said the health
ministries of South Africa and Zimbabwe are striving to coordinate
their efforts together with the World Health Organization.
"The rapid deterioration of the health service delivery system in
Zimbabwe, lack of adequate water supply, and inability to dispose of
solid waste and repair sewage blockages in most areas will continue to
contribute to the escalation and spread of the outbreak," said OCHA
spokeswoman Elisabeth Byrs.
Cholera is now hitting the whole of eastern Zimbabwe and spreading,
she said, as UN
humanitarian agencies aim to ensure delivery of medical
supplies, clean drinking water and water purification kits.
Byrs said basic hygiene kits comprising a bucket or jerry can, soap
and water treatment tablets have been distributed to at least 4000
households in the Zimbabwean capital Harare.
UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) spokeswoman Veronique Taveau said that
unlike previous outbreaks that mainly affected rural areas, the current
epidemic is affecting densely-populated urban centres, "which leads to
its rapid expansion and makes it harder to fight against the disease."
Jean-Philippe Chauzy of the International Organization for Migration
said Zimbabweans fleeing deprivation in their country were contributing
to spreading the disease.
South Africa has reported seven cholera deaths over the last two
weeks, all Zimbabweans or people who had recently come from the
country.
Phuti Seloba, health department spokesman in the South
African
border town of Musina, said that dozens of cholera patients from
Zimbabwe enter the country every day.
South African health authorities have set up five cholera treatment
centres along the border to handle the influx, he added.
Zimbabwe belatedly changed its tune Thursday and asked for
international help to fight the outbreak after long insisting that the
situation was under control.
"With the coming of the rainy season, the situation could get
worse," said deputy health minister Edwin Muguti. "Our problems are
quite simple. We need to be helped."