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89 people are killed by mystery disease in South Sudan: WHO taskforce sent...
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89 people are killed by mystery disease in South Sudan:
WHO taskforce sent to investigate unidentified illness


Unknown disease has killed 89 people
in northern town of Fangak, Jonglei state

The World Health Organisation has sent
a rapid response team to investigate

Samples taken by local health officials
returned negative results for cholera



By RACHAEL BUNYAN FOR MAILONLINE

PUBLISHED: 06:14 EST, 14 December 2021 
UPDATED: 06:58 EST, 14 December 2021



A World Health Organization (WHO) taskforce has been sent to South Sudan to
investigate an unidentified illness which has killed 89 people.

The country's ministry of health reported that an unknown disease had killed scores
of people in the northern town of Fangak in Jonglei state.

The WHO sent a rapid response team of scientists to the area, which is one of the
worst hit by recent severe flooding, to collect samples from sick people, reports the BBC.


Local health officials in Fangak said initial samples from the sick returned negative
results for cholera.


[Image: JhlXIbE.jpg]
A World Health Organization (WHO) taskforce has been sent to South Sudan
to investigate an unidentified illness which has killed 89 people.
Pictured: File image of Medecins Sans Frontiere (MSF) workers prepare a
mobile clinic in Rubkona town, Unity State, South Sudan on November 26




[Image: ZypQUbr.jpg]
The country's ministry of health reported that an unknown disease had killed
scores of people in the northern town of Fangak in Jonglei state




'We decided to send a rapid response team to go and do risk assessment and investigation;
that is when they will be able to collect samples from the sick people - but provisionally the
figure that we got was that there were 89 deaths,' Sheila Baya, from the WHO, told the BBC.

Baya said the team of scientists had to reach Fangak via a helicopter due to severe flooding
in the area, adding that the group are waiting for transport to return them to the capital Juba
on Wednesday.

In the bordering state of Unity, severe floods have increased the spread of diseases such as
malaria and caused malnutrition in children due to food shortages, Lam Tungwar Kueigwong,
the state's minister of land, housing and public utilities, said.

Oil from the fields in the region had contaminated the water, he said, leading to the death of
domestic animals.

The flooding in the north of South Sudan has cut off communities from accessing supplies of food
and other vital commodities. 



[Image: ZwoYSRX.jpg]
An aerial view shows houses submerged in flood waters in Bentiu,
in Unity State, South Sudan



[Image: eRTaHyl.jpg]
A South Sudanese wades through flood waters as she collects
firewood in Rubkona, Unity State




More than 700,000 people have been affected by the worst flooding in the country for nearly
60 years, the U.N. refugee agency UNHCR said, blaming climate change. 

The suffering caused by the floods, including food shortages and illnesses, is putting pressure
on the health facilities, said international charity Médecins Sans Frontières, which operates in
the area.

'We are extremely concerned about malnutrition, with severe acute malnutrition levels two times
the WHO threshold, and the number of children admitted to our hospital with severe malnutrition
doubling since the start of the floods,' MSF said.

For Nyatuak Koang, a mother of three boys and two girls, that concern is all too real for her after
the floods forced her to move twice.

'We don't have anywhere to sleep, we don't have any mosquito nets and we don't have material
to cover our house,' she said.

Nearly a decade after South Sudan gained independence following a war, it faces the threat of
conflict, climate change and COVID-19, the outgoing head of the U.N. mission in the country
said in March.

Nearly all the population depends on international food aid, and most basic services such as health
and education are provided by the United Nations agencies and aid groups.




Semper Fidelis

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USMC
Nemo me impune lacessit
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