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Rift Valley Fever kills 96 people in Sudan
14 Nov 2007 21:02:27 GMT
Source: Reuters
(Updates death toll to 96)

By Andrew Heavens

KHARTOUM, Nov 14 (Reuters) - Rift Valley Fever has killed 96 people in Sudan since reports of an outbreak surfaced a week ago and it is still spreading, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Wednesday.

The UN body has started holding daily meetings to monitor the spread of the disease, which can kill as many as half of those who contract it, has no effective human vaccine and can devastate livestock.

A WHO spokeswoman said the latest figures showed 329 known human cases in Sudan, up from 228 reported six days ago, with a death rate of just under 30 percent.

In its most serious haemorrhagic form, which the WHO says has appeared in Sudan, it can kill up to 50 per cent of the people it infects.

Herders and other people who work with animals are most vulnerable to the disease, which can spread through contact with contaminated blood or bites from infected mosquitoes.

The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) said it had sent an animal health expert to Sudan to help the government contain any outbreak in livestock and said Sudan had already reported some animal infections to the Paris-based World Organization for Animal Health.

But Khartoum denied making any such report on Wednesday and the Ministry of Animal Resources said there were no confirmed cases in herds despite the outbreak among humans.

National daily Alray Alam also reported a number of Sudan's key trading partners, including Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, had already imposed temporary bans on imports and the movement of Sudanese animals over their borders.

Egypt had also sent teams of vets to its southern border with Sudan to monitor the situation, media said.

The FAO said they were also monitoring an outbreak of desert locusts in northern Sudan. It warned that without proper spraying, the insects could form swarms and devastate crops in countries along the Red Sea coast, and as far west as Sudan's troubled Darfur region, into next year. (Editing by Richard Balmforth)

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United Nations and African Union Mission in the Sudan (AMIS) police chat with children at the Abu Shouk camp for internally displaced people (IDP) on the outskirts of El Fasher, the administrative capital of North Darfur, November 13, 2007. This was the first joint visit by the African Union Mission in the Sudan (AMIS) and UN Police to the camp to highlight the concept of community policing in IDP camps and to explain the mandate of UNAMID police, which is due to start its work in Darfur on January 1, 2008. Picture taken November 13, 2007. REUTERS/Stuart Price/AMIS/Handout (SUDAN). EDITORIAL USE ONLY. NOT FOR SALE FOR MARKETING OR ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS.



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