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Cholera Outbreak Kills 16 People in Central African Republic

by Shirley Johanna on August 13, 2016 at 6:46 PM

Sixteen people succumbed to cholera outbreak in the Central African Republic, said UNICEF. The UN children's agency said 66 cases had been recorded along the Oubangui River since the government declared the outbreak on August 10.

A government toll on Tuesday had put the toll at 10 dead.


Cholera is transmitted through contaminated drinking water and causes acute diarrhea.

‘In 2011, the last major cholera outbreak in Central African Republic claimed 20 lives around the capital.’

"Young children, especially those under five years of age, are particularly vulnerable to this deadly disease," said UNICEF's representative in CAR, Mohammed Malick Fall.

The outbreak started in Djoukou, a remote area around 100 kilometers (62 miles) up the river from the capital Bangui.

"Communities in this area have little or no access to clean water and use the Oubangui river as their primary source of water," UNICEF said in a statement, adding that it was providing medicine, clean water and equipment to local residents.

"Affected people traveling in overcrowded boats have carried the bacteria downstream."

The last major outbreak of cholera in CAR, in 2011, left around 20 people dead around the capital.

Already one of the poorest countries on the planet, CAR is struggling to recover from a bloody two-year conflict that broke out in 2013 between mainly Muslim Seleka rebels and Christian vigilantes known as "anti-balaka" (anti-machete) militias.

The bloodletting left thousands of people dead and hundreds of thousands were forced to flee their homes, according to the UN.

Source: AFP

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