. Earth Science News .
EPIDEMICS
Haiti cholera toll passes 1,000, unrest fears grow

by Staff Writers
Port-Au-Prince (AFP) Nov 16, 2010
Haiti's cholera death toll passed 1,000 on Tuesday as mounting anger at the health crisis saw tensions spike with UN peacekeepers accused by some of being the source of the outbreak.

Burning tires wafted thick black smoke across the northern city of Cap-Haitien, where thousands of protesters went on the rampage Monday, setting a police station ablaze and threatening to torch a UN compound.

Two Haitians died in the riots, including one shot by a peacekeeper in an incident that raised fears of further unrest targeting the unpopular United Nations force, which is known by the acronym MINUSTAH.

Six UN peacekeepers were injured in a second protest Monday in the central city of Hinche, near the base of a Nepalese unit accused of bringing the Vibrio cholerae bacterium into the country.

"We are monitoring the situation in other towns where demonstrations were attempted this morning," a police officer told AFP Tuesday on condition of anonymity.

He said Interior Minister Paul-Antoine Bien-Aime and Haitian police chief Mario Andresol would lead a delegation to the north in the coming days to help restore calm.

The cholera death toll rose Tuesday to 1,034, the health ministry said, with about 16,800 people hospitalized since the disease surfaced in late October -- the quake-hit nation's first outbreak since the 1960s.

Haitian officials have struggled to battle the disease in a nation still ravaged by a January earthquake that killed 250,000 people and left 1.3 million people homeless.

Officials fear the cholera epidemic could spread like wildfire if it infiltrates squalid camps around the capital where hundreds of thousands of quake refugees live in cramped and unsanitary conditions.

MINUSTAH issued a statement linking the protests to presidential elections in less than two weeks time and calling on Haitians not to allow themselves to be manipulated by "the enemies of stability and democracy."

"The way the events unfolded leads to the belief that these incidents were politically motivated, aimed at creating a climate of insecurity ahead of the elections," it said.

There are claims the outbreak emanated from septic tanks at the Nepalese base which is suspected of leaking diseased feces into a tributary to the Artibonite River on Haiti's central plateau.

A Nepalese army spokesman in Kathmandu hit out at the "false rumors" and told AFP they had reinforced security for their peacekeepers in Haiti and had even drafted in Haitian police to help with their protection.

MINUSTAH has said it has tested some of the Nepalese and found no trace of cholera, and health officials have said that although Haiti's cholera is a south Asian strain this is no smoking gun as the strain is very common.

US experts are running more DNA sequencing tests on samples collected from Haitian cholera victims, but experts say the exact origin of the strain causing the epidemic in Haiti will never be known.

The November 28 elections could even be in doubt as there are now cholera cases in every one of Haiti's 10 departments and leading aid group Doctors Without Borders (MSF) says its facilities in the capital are overrun.

"We're worried that we won't have the capacity to treat all patients in the coming days," said MSF emergency coordinator Caroline Seguin.

"They're arriving in large numbers, our hospital is completely full, we're even having to refuse referrals because we know we're unable to treat them."

During the first days of the epidemic, MSF said its teams were receiving three new patients with cholera-like symptoms each day in Port-au-Prince, and now they're seeing 300.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Epidemics on Earth - Bird Flu, HIV/AIDS, Ebola



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


EPIDEMICS
New Way Of Predicting Dominant Seasonal Flu Strain
Houston TX (SPX) Nov 16, 2010
Rice University scientists have found a way to predict rapidly whether a new strain of the influenza virus should be included in the annual seasonal flu vaccine. While it sometimes takes new flu strains up to three years to become dominant worldwide, the new method can predict whether they will become dominant as little as tw ... read more







EPIDEMICS
Minneapolis Disaster Spawning New Concepts In Bridge Research, Testing And Safety

Shanghai blaze stirs anger over China's lax safety

Shanghai fire toll at 53 as relatives search for the missing

New Sensor Allows On-Site, Faster Testing For Scour Assessment

EPIDEMICS
Breaking The Ice Before It Begins

Thales announces venture for Chinese in-flight systems

Virtual Reality Helps Researchers Track How Brain Responds To Surroundings

Next Google phone will be mobile wallet: Schmidt

EPIDEMICS
Fading fish stocks driving Asian sea rivalries

Shark sanctuary declared in eastern Indonesia

Nearly all Gulf of Mexico waters open to fishing after spill

Scientists find new squid in Indian Ocean depths

EPIDEMICS
Report warns of dangers of Arctic drilling

Russian Drifting Polar Station SP-38 Opens In Chukchi Sea

Increased Arctic Shipping Could Accelerate Climate Change

Is The Ice At The South Pole Melting

EPIDEMICS
Detroit's Urban Farms Could Provide A Majority Of Produce For Local Residents

African Dust Caused Red Soil In Southern Europe

New Research Changes Understanding Of C4 Plant Evolution

Light Technology To Combat Hospital Infections

EPIDEMICS
Indonesians ignore volcano threat to go home

Red Cross calls for nearly double in aid for Pakistan

Indonesians ignore volcano threat to go home

Two dead as rain batters Belgium

EPIDEMICS
UN negotiating Sudan peacekeepers increase: Ban

Military solution failing in eastern Congo: crisis group

UN culture body warns Tanzania on Serengeti highway

Soldiers fire on Central Africa crowd, three wounded

EPIDEMICS
Human Children Outpaced Neanderthals By Slowing Down

Paraguay nixes British expedition to remote tribal region

Origin Of Cells Associated With Nerve Repair Discovered

The Brains Of Neanderthals And Modern Humans Developed Differently


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement