Cholera outbreak has allegedly claimed lives of 96 people in Zamfara State,
while over 500 infected people are said to be receiving medical
treatment from the doctors of Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF). Most of
the deceased are reportedly children.
Dr.
Umar Lawal, the permanent secretary, Ministry of Health, confirmed the
eipdemic outbreak, but refused to state the exact number of those who
died.
It
has been gathered that, due to water scarcity in the area, the
residents had to consume water from local ponds, which happened to be
contaminated.
The
state commissioner of health, Alhaji Kabiru Janyau, has also confirmed
there has been an outbreak of the disease, and affirmed that people got
infected through the polluted water.
Médecins
Sans Frontières, a French secular humanitarian-aid non-governmental
organization, also known as Doctors Without Borders, was invited to
Shagari hospital in state’s capital Gusau. There, temporary camps for
victims’ treatment is ongoing.
Journalists
are not allowed to step inside the temporary camps, an inside source
revealed that it is forbidden to release any information related to the
scale of the disaster.
Another
source from Maradun and Bungudu local government areas said the death
toll has already risen, and the situation is getting worse, as more
people are getting infected.
The Health ministry has dispatched teams of medical officers to the affected areas to control the situation.

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