Four killed in suspected Iraq cholera outbreak

A suspected cholera outbreak has killed four people west of Baghdad, where vulnerable displaced populations have been affected by the lack of clean water, health officials said Saturday.

September 19, 2015

Sahoub Baghdadi

 


 


Baghdad — A suspected cholera outbreak has killed four people west of Baghdad, where vulnerable displaced populations have been affected by the lack of clean water, health officials said Saturday.



The health ministry strongly suspects the deaths, which occurred in the Abu Ghraib area near Baghdad, were the result of a cholera outbreak first reported a week earlier.



“Last week, we announced that there 12 cases of cholera in Abu Ghraib and Najaf,” Health Ministry spokesman Rifaq Al-Araji said. “Since then, other cases have appeared in Abu Ghraib, and the reason is water that is not suitable for drinking,” he said.



“Some people are drinking directly from the (Euphrates) river and the wells. The river water is polluted because the level is too low,” Araji explained.



“We now have four dead in Abu Ghraib in suspected cholera cases,” he said, adding that official laboratory results would be known soon. — AFP


September 19, 2015
HIGHLIGHTS
World
7 minutes ago

Israeli strikes in northern Gaza kill at least 48, hospital says

World
15 minutes ago

South Africa's President Ramaphosa says Afrikaners resettling in US are 'cowards'

SAUDI ARABIA
2 hours ago

Saudi crown prince hosts Trump–Syrian president meeting in Riyadh