Cholera: Zim asks for help
2008-11-27 16:58
Special Report
An animal protection group says four Chinese nationals have been arrested on cruelty charges after they cut up and ate rare tortoises.
A dusty road leads to the village of Wedza, where veterans of Zimbabwe's liberation war eke out a meagre living on their farm cooperative, which after a promising start now brings only despair.
Harare - Zimbabwe's deputy health minister Edwin Muguti on Thursday appealed for aid to fight a cholera epidemic, saying the death toll had risen to 386 and could get worse.
Muguti, who just one day earlier had insisted that the outbreak was under control, said a total of 9 363 cases had been reported and warned the disease could spread even more as the rainy season gets underway.
"With the coming of the rainy season, the situation could get worse. Our problems are quite simple. We need to be assisted," he said on state television.
"We are quite grateful to the South Africans who have assisted us to contain the outbreak," he added.
Sanctions blamed
"It's very regrettable that people are dying of cholera," Muguti said, and again blamed Western sanctions on President Robert Mugabe for creating the outbreak.
"Maybe the ones who created this situation have decided to kill us softly," he said.
Cholera has exploded across the country, as the nation's dilapidated infrastructure has left sewage flowing openly in the streets while drinking water goes untreated.
The disease has spread to neighbouring South Africa, where five people died of cholera after returning from Zimbabwe over the last week.
More than 200 others have been treated in a hospital in the South African border town of Musina.
- AFP