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Sudan floods death toll reaches 89
22 Aug 2007 09:47:16 GMT
Source: Reuters
By Abigail Hauslohner

KHARTOUM, Aug 22 (Reuters) - Some 89 people have died in flooding in Sudan as heavy rains that washed away homes and spread water-borne disease continue to batter the country, a government official said on Wednesday.

Sudanese officials have described this year's floods as the worst in living memory with unexpectedly early rains destroying more than 70,000 homes.

"Eighty-nine people passed away," Hamadallah Adam Ali, head of the government Civil Defence Authority, told Reuters on Wednesday.

"Some drowned, some had their houses collapse," he said, adding some people were electrocuted.

A U.N. statement said the world body was giving Sudan a grant of $8.7 million for flood relief.

"Amid continued devastation caused by floods in the Sudan ... (the United Nations) has approved a grant of US$8.7 million to support the ongoing humanitarian response," said the statement by the U.N.'s humanitarian aid agency, OCHA.

OCHA said the floods had affected hundreds of thousands of people across a dozen states in Africa's largest country and many do not have adequate access to food aid.

Heavy flooding in some states has destroyed latrines and polluted water supplies, spreading deadly water-borne diseases like cholera and malaria.

A WHO official said the number of cholera cases in east Sudan had risen to 808, including 53 deaths.

Cholera causes severe diarrhoea and can lead to death within hours if not treated.

"Eight hundred and eight cases and 53 deaths, but since the last three days there have not been any new cases," Ahmed al-Ganainy, a WHO official told Reuters.

He added the outbreak could not be considered contained until several weeks had passed without new cases.

Sudan's Ministry of Health has appeared reluctant to release information on the cholera outbreak. But Reuters obtained a ministry report last week confirming 70 percent of the diarrhoea cases in the east tested positive for cholera.

Ministry officials declined to give any information on the outbreak to Reuters on Wednesday, but the WHO says their numbers are from the ministry.
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United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon (R) talks to African Union (AU) Force Commander General Martin Agwai of Nigeria during his visit to the the north Darfur capital of El Fasher September 5, 2007. Ban told journalists he would push for progress in peace talks between the Sudanese government and rebel groups, while laying the ground for deployment of a 26,000-strong "hybrid" force of U.N. and African Union peacekeepers.



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