Coronavirus and flooding put five million children at risk of Cholera in Yemen

Home > Media Contacts and Press Releases > Coronavirus and flooding put five million children at risk of Cholera in Yemen

*Spokespeople in Sana’a available for interview

BROLL showing severe flooding in Yemen

BROLL of water-trucking response during Coronavirus

29 April 2020 – Over five million children under the age of five in Yemen are facing a heightened threat of cholera and Acute Watery Diarrhoea (AWD) as the country continues to experience increased heavy rains since mid-April.

More than 110,000 cases of suspected cholera have been recorded across 290 of Yemen’s 331 districts since January 2020. Children under the age of five account for a quarter of these cases.

This comes as Yemen grapples with the impact of the global Coronavirus pandemic. Thus far only one case has been reported in the country, but the risk of outbreak remains very high.

“Children in Yemen continue to face a myriad of threats to their survival. A further spread of cholera, high levels of malnutrition and outbreaks of vaccine preventable diseases compounded by COVID-19 will only exacerbate the burden that children and their families already face,” said Sara Beysolow Nyanti, UNICEF Representative in Yemen. “A tragedy continues to unfold in Yemen in the full glare of the world”, she added.

Recent heavy rains and flash floods in Aden, Abyan, Lahj and Sana’a City have interrupted access to safe drinking water and sanitation facilities, as well as destroyed homes and displaced families – providing a perfect recipe for the spread of cholera.

UNICEF has responded urgently to families affected by the floods by providing basic hygiene kits, including disinfectants, chlorine, buckets and towels. The response also focuses on the repair of the disrupted water infrastructure to restore immediate access to safe drinking water for children and their families.

Very low levels of sanitation services especially in urban areas, use of contaminated water, lack of awareness about basic hygiene practices, including effective handwashing and food hygiene have driven the spread of cholera/Acute Watery Diarrhoea  in Yemen where basic services are on the brink of collapse or in best cases, inadequately maintained due to the conflict and years of poverty and neglect.

“Cholera and acute watery diarrhoea are preventable and can be treated. Our response, therefore, focuses on making sure families and their communities have sustained access to clean water and improved sanitation, while also being aware of how they can reduce the health risks,” says Nyanti.

In 2017, UNICEF and partners like the World Health Organization (WHO) managed to contain one of the world’s worst cholera outbreaks through a combination of community awareness; Water, Hygiene and Sanitation(WASH); and Health responses, including strengthening of surveillance and case detection, deploying rapid response teams to several affected areas and scaling up treatment of cholera and Acute Watery Diarrhoea – measures that will continue this year to alleviate the suffering of children and families.

“Without an end to the brutal five-year old long conflict in Yemen, these devastating preventable disease outbreaks will continue to stalk the lives of many, and first and foremost vulnerable children.”

 ENDS

Notes to editors:

For more information, please contact:

Alexandra Murdoch, 0207 375 6179, [email protected]

Unicef UK Media Team, 0207 375 6030, [email protected]

 About Unicef

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