The World Heath Organisation said yesterday it had confirmed 11 cases of cholera in Yemen’s capital Sanaa, after the UN announced an outbreak of the disease last week.
“So far, we have 17 suspected cholera cases, and 11 that are confirmed,” WHO expert Amro Saleh told reporters in the rebel-held capital.
All confirmed cases came from one neighbourhood, Saleh said, adding that no deaths had so far been reported from the disease.
Saleh also said that “143 cases of severe diarrhoea” were admitted to hospitals in other provinces, including 49 in southwestern Taiz and 42 in Hodeida, by the Red Sea.
All those cases have tested negative for cholera, according to another WHO expert present at yesterday’s press briefing.
Saleh said he was “confident that the epidemic will remain under control.”
Thousands of families fleeing Yemen’s war are living in camps outside Sanaa, where conditions could lead to the spread of cholera, including through contaminated food or water.
The WHO and the UN’s children agency Unicef said on Friday that cholera cases had been reported, with eight cases recorded by health authorities in Sanaa.
Unicef Yemen representative Julien Harneis said that the outbreak “adds to the misery of millions of children in Yemen.”
The WHO warned that the scarcity of drinkable water has worsened the hygiene situation in Yemen, fuelling a marked increase in cases of severe diarrhoea, in particular among people displaced from their homes in the centre of the country.
Unicef said that cholera, a disease that is transmitted through contaminated drinking water and causes acute diarrhoea, could prove fatal in up to 15% of untreated cases.
The agency says nearly 3mn people in Yemen are in need of immediate food supplies, while 1.5mn children suffer malnutrition, including 370,000 enduring very severe malnutrition that weakens their immune system.
The conflict between Yemen’s government and Iran-backed rebels escalated last year with the intervention of a Saudi-led Arab coalition in support of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi.
Much of the country’s infrastructure, including schools and hospitals, has been destroyed by the 18-month old conflict.

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