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DJIBOUTI: Cholera Outbreak In Northwest Under Control

Issue 280
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Ethiopian Airlines Demand 'President Dahir Rayale Kahin And His Delegation' Be Searched At Hargeysa Airport

Somaliland Cabinet Exempts An Oil Company Of $1 Million Fee

Government Bans Celebrations Of Human Rights Day

15 Dead In Buhoodle Clan Clash

“We Will Negotiate With Our Brothers In Somaliland For The Unity Of Somalia” Says Ghedi

Somaliland Cancels Executions For Aid Worker Killers

African Union Seeks NATO Airlift For Somalia - NATO

Ali Mazrui Advises On Somalia Environment

Five Ethiopians Wounded In Somali Attack: Government

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Al-Jabri To Build Livestock Facilities In Somaliland

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27 Somali Illegal Immigrants Rescued At Sea

Russia To Provide Poorest Countries $500 Mln In Financial Aid

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'Dead' Klansman on trial over 1964 deaths

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Africa’s greatest deceptions

Africa Outside Edge Expedition

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Why Mysterious Spy Planes Are Scouring Somaliland Landscape And Coastline?

Somaliland - Rising Fears And Frustration

Somaliland: The Case For Recognition

The Supreme Court Needs Our Urgent and Genuine Help

Whose Reconciliation Is It?

In Kuwait: Brave Somalilanders Celebrate 18 May Amid Tough Security Restrictions

What role would Ethiopia/USA play to tackle the Somaliland/Somalia issue?


NAIROBI, May 29, 2007 – An outbreak of cholera that left five people dead in two villages in the Tadjourah region of northwestern Djibouti has been contained, an official with the UN World Health Organization (WHO) said on 29 May.

"No new cases have been reported in the area since 18 May," Djibouti-based WHO medical officer Karim Djibaoui told IRIN. Efforts to bring the outbreak under control included setting up emergency treatment centers in the affected areas, providing clean drinking water and launching a hygiene awareness campaign, he added.

About 76 cases of the disease, including the five fatalities, had been reported in the area in the first two weeks of May.

Cholera is an acute intestinal infection caused by bacteria, spread through the consumption of contaminated water and food. Symptoms include diarrhoea and vomiting, leading to severe dehydration and even death if left untreated.

A Djibouti news agency, Agence Djiboutienne D'Information, said local health officials had linked the latest outbreak in Hangade and Balho localities in Tadjourah to the use of water from a contaminated well by illegal immigrants.

According to WHO, recommended cholera control measures include the hygienic disposal of human faeces, the provision of adequate and safe drinking water, and ensuring the best possible standards of food hygiene, including thorough cooking and avoiding food that may have come into contact with contaminated surfaces.

Source: IRIN


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