/ 21 August 2006

Diarrhoea kills 150 in flood-hit Ethiopia

Diarrhoea has killed 150 people and infected nearly 12 000 in flood-ravaged Ethiopia, the United Nations said on Monday, as aid agencies and governments struggled to deliver food and supplies to tens of thousands left homeless.

Flash floods that began swamping villages and towns earlier this month have already killed about 900 people and displaced about 48 000 more, many of whom are at risk from water-borne diseases, including acute diarrhoea and cholera.

”Despite collaborated efforts, containment of the disease has not been successful with the disease spreading at an alarming rate,” the UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said in a report.

In badly hit Dire Dawa town, about 525km east of the capital Addis Ababa, the United States Agency for International Development (USAid) said it had delivered $85 000 worth of supplies including food, mattresses and water treatment kits.

”Among the most pressing humanitarian needs are the provision of shelter and sanitation services for 6 000 newly homeless individuals [in Dire Dawa],” USAid mission director Glenn Anders said in a statement.

Hampered relief efforts

The African Union, which is based in Addis, pledged to give the Ethiopian government $100 000 to help relief efforts, which are being hampered by the continuing rainfall and poor access to the remote flooded areas.

Ethiopia’s state news agency ENA also said Libya had delivered canned food, blankets and tents and will continue sending aid to the Horn of Africa nation this week.

Ethiopians have begun a national collection drive, with everyone from civil servants to schoolchildren contributing.

The government has relocated 13 000 people in the northern Gondar region, ENA reported, and another 2 000 are being moved from around the overflowing Omo river in the south.

A group of US soldiers based in nearby Djibouti has also arrived in Dire Dawa, bringing 52 tents and planning to dig latrines for the 6 000 homeless currently sheltering in schools.

Ethiopia appealed for aid last week and has warned of more flooding in areas around the coffee-growing country.

Floods typically occur in its lowlands after heavy rains in the June to September rainy season drench the highlands. — Reuters