THE SMART NEWS SOURCE | Feb 11 2012 02:07 | LAST UPDATED Feb 11 2012 02:07 |
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Libyan unrest snarls Tunisian resort airportWith the fight to overthrow Muammar Gaddafi in Libya, Djerbahas become the only Tunisian airport to process tens of thousands of fleeing refugees. Spectre of cholera still haunts ZimbabweThe cholera infection rate in Zimbabwe is nearing the 100 000 mark in Africa's worst outbreak in 15 years, aid agencies said on Tuesday. WHO: Zim cholera cases pass 50 000 markMore than 50 000 are infected with cholera in Zimbabwe's epidemic, which has killed 2 773 people, the WHO said on Friday. Red Cross deploys teams to fight cholera in ZimThe Red Cross has deployed seven emergency teams normally reserved for major global disasters to fight Zimbabwe's worsening cholera epidemic. Red Cross asks for $420-million for developmentThe international Red Cross is asking for $420-million, but acknowledged that the global financial crisis means donors will be less generous. Red Cross begins emergency food distribution in ZimThe Red Cross said it will on Wednesday start distributing emergency food supplies across Zimbabwe to reach about 24 000 vulnerable people. US flies cyclone aid to BurmaThe first United States military aid flight landed in Burma on Monday, but relief supplies continued to just dribble into the reclusive state nine days after a cyclone. A C-130 military transport plane left Thailand's Vietnam war-era U-Tapao airbase carrying 12 700kg of water, mosquito nets and blankets. Floods in Uganda: Can such disasters be prevented?"Our crops have been destroyed by the water and houses have collapsed," says Egoliam of his village's ordeal in Amuria, Uganda. The heaviest rains in 35 years have caused the worst floods on the continent in decades. Flood waters have destroyed vital infrastructure and left more than one million people needing emergency help. Red Cross: Nearly 90 dead in West Africa floodsSevere floods across West Africa have killed at least 87 people, most of them in Nigeria, over the past two months, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said on Tuesday. Weather conditions worsened considerably in August, with areas of hard-hit northern Togo difficult to reach because bridges were swept away by heavy rains. |
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