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February 17, 2001

S. Africa Cholera Sickens 50,000


The Associated Press

DURBAN, South Africa – South Africa's worst cholera epidemic in more than 15 years has killed 111 people and sickened more than 50,000 others since August, health authorities said Friday.

More than 1,500 people were diagnosed with the disease over a 24-hour period from Thursday to Friday alone, raising the number sickened in the epidemic to 50,614, the provincial health department in KwaZulu-Natal said.

A 6-year-old and two adults were the epidemic's latest victims, authorities said.

The cholera epidemic is South Africa's worst since the early 1980s, when more than 105,400 people contracted the highly contagious waterborne disease over a four-year period. More than 340 people died in four consecutive epidemics.

Cholera, which causes severe diarrhea, can only be controlled by providing rural residents with clean drinking water and sanitation, the World Health Organization has said.

Recent studies show that 21 million South Africans lack access to sanitation, and at least 8 million do not have access to clean drinking water. Many rely on river water for cooking, drinking and washing. Authorities urged South Africans to purify the water by boiling it or adding bleach.

The government has allocated $82.5 million for water and sanitation for KwaZulu-Natal province, Water Affairs Minister Ronnie Kasrils told Parliament earlier this week.

 

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