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Struggle to Halt Cholera Points Up Iraqi Division

Current Headlines

Struggle to Halt Cholera Points Up Iraqi Division

Oct 06, 08:19 AM

Current Headlines: By KATARINA KRATOVAC

By Katarina Kratovac

The Associated Press

BAGHDAD

Majida Hamid Ibrahim seemed no different from any other victim in Iraq - her body was put in a plastic bag and sent to the morgue for relatives to collect. But authorities were already bemoaning her death.

Days before, the 40-year-old woman from Baghdad's southern outskirts became the first confirmed cholera case in the Iraqi capital from an outbreak spreading around the country. The World Health Organization has confirmed more than 3,300 cholera cases in Iraq and at least 14 deaths from the acute and rapid dehydration it causes.

The troubles also point beyond the immediate struggle to control the deadly advance.

They highlight the creeping fractures throughout the government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, the country's deepening sectarian gulf and a gangland-style lawlessness in which even medical supplies are fair game for bandits.

The health minister, Ali al-Shemari, fled the country after U.S. forces raided offices in February and arrested his deputy, accused of diverting millions of dollars to the biggest Shiite militia and of allowing death squads' use of ambulances and hospitals to carry out kidnappings and killings.

The government official overseeing Iraqis living abroad was brought in as acting health minister in al-Maliki's shaky Cabinet - which was further jolted by the walkout of six Sunni ministers in August.

Hospitals also are divided along Iraq's sectarian split, with Shiites and Sunnis often too scared to venture into any facility controlled by the other. For health workers, this leaves worrying gaps with cholera cases now reaching half of Iraq's 18 provinces.

The main hospital in Baqouba was twice overrun by Sunni gunmen who kidnapped some of the Shiite patients, said a provincial health official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of fears for his safety.

Fourteen Baqouba physicians and five ambulance drivers have been killed and 12 doctors kidnapped since Diyala fighting escalated earlier this year. Gunmen often steal medical equipment and medicine from health centers and force pharmacists to give up their supplies, the official said.

Saeed al-Shimary recounted how four months ago, as he lay sick in the Baqouba hospital, gunmen fatally shot a hospital guard and took several patients away, including his relative.

"I was horrified," said al-Shimary, a teacher.

WHO has confirmed at least 3,315 cholera cases and registered more than 30,000 cases of acute watery diarrhea - which could also prove to be cholera in its more common, milder form. The group has also warned that the bacteria could spread further.

Dr. Naeema al-Gasseer, WHO representative in Iraq, says the numbers fuel the panic, when in fact the death rate has been "very much less than 1 percent of the total outbreak."

"Let's not focus on numbers, that's not the way to deal with cholera," she said. "We must look at ways to contain it."

Cholera, usually spread by drinking contaminated water, typically causes severe diarrhea that in extreme cases can lead to fatal dehydration and kidney failure. There are normally about 30 cases registered each year in Iraq. The last major outbreak was in 1999, when 20 cases were discovered in one day.

Cholera can be controlled by treating drinking water with chlorine.

(c) 2007 Virginian - Pilot. Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning. All rights Reserved.

Struggle to Halt Cholera Points Up Iraqi Division
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