About 56 children have died in the ongoing cholera and
measles outbreak in Borno and Kano states.
While
cholera is said to have killed 50 in Borno, measles is said to have claimed six
lives in Kano.
Residents
in the affected communities and stakeholders in the sector are thus calling on
the state governments to quickly arrest the spread of the diseases.
Residents in Kiru Local Government Area of Kano State on
Monday said that 17 children had died of measles and whooping cough in their
communities.
Our
correspondent gathered that six children were also affected in
Dashi community of Kiru local government area. The children affected, according
to the villagers, were in Kankwana and Dashi communities in Dangora ward
of the local government area.
A
council health official, Mallam Hassan Adamu, who confirmed the outbreak, said
efforts were in progress to provide immediate medical support to the affected
communities.
Although
the state government had yet to confirm the number of the casualties, a World
Health Organisation representative, Mallam Yakubu Sani, attributed the outbreak
to poor routine immunisation, as well as inadequate health mobilisation
activity in the rural communities.
A villager
within the community, Abdullahi Rufai Kiru, claimed that over 40 children had
so far been affected.
To this
end, the District Head of Kiru, Alhaji lbrahim Bayero, has already paid a
condolence visit to the family of the deceased, urging the state government to
deploy medical personnel to the affected areas for immediate intervention.
Meanwhile,
the United Nations Children’s Fund has said that the cholera outbreak has been
arrested.
Speaking
in Maiduguri during this year’s celebration of the Hand-washing Day, the Field
Officer of UNICEF in Borno State, Geoffrey Ijumba, said for the past one week
no new death had been recorded.
He said as
simply as it might seem, routine hand-washing with water and soap had saved
many lives as it had checkmated “water borne diseases”.
Ijumba
stated that UNICEF in conjunction with the Borno State Government and other stakeholders
had gone out to provide hand solar and motorised water pumps.
The Borno
State Commissioner for Water Resources, Dr. Zainab Gimba, who also spoke on the
occasion, attributed the cholera outbreak to poor hygiene practices among the
people living in urban and rural centres of the state.
She
encouraged residents to wash their hands before eating at home and public
gatherings.
She said
the state government had targeted 70 per cent of houses and 100 per cent of
schools with hygiene sanitation facilities by the 2025.
She noted
that significant progress had been made in water and sanitation services in IDP
camps and host communities.
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