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[casi] Iraq's top child killer, diarrhea, sharply up: UNICEF



Agence France-Presse (AFP)

Date: 8 Jun 2003


Iraq's top child killer, diarrhea, sharply up: UNICEF

BAGHDAD, June 8 (AFP) - The number of children who suffer from diarrhea,
Iraq's number one killer of infants, has more than doubled over this time
last year, the United Nations children's fund (UNICEF) said Sunday.
While the ailment "may sound trivial, in Iraq it kills," said the agency's
spokesman, Geoffrey Keele, noting that 70 percent of child deaths before the
war were the result of diarrhea or respiratory infections.

"We've recorded a 2.5 increase in the number of children contracting
diarrhea, some chronically, compared to May last year. It means that 72
percent of the children we surveyed had diarrhea," Keele told reporters.

He said cholera, whose symptoms include heavy diarrhea leading to
dehydration and possible death in children, was also on the rise with 66
confirmed cases in Basra, southern Iraq.

The disease has already killed three there and overwhelmingly struck those
under five years of age.

Other diseases such as dysentery and typhoid, also spread through
contaminated water and food, are "becoming a real problem for children,"
Keele said.

He said UNICEF provided health centers with appropriate treatments ahead of
Iraq's hottest summer months, July and August, when diarrhea typically soars
and deplored the country's "poor hygiene when it could actually make all the
difference."

"There are (currently) 500 breaks in Baghdad's water system alone that lead
to contamination with sewage," he said.

"And before the war, more than 500,000 tons of sewage was dumped in
Baghdad's fresh water reserves. I don't think this has changed," he added.

A spokeswoman for the World Food Program (WFP) said her organization had
started distributing food rations across the country for the first time
since the beginning of the war.

"But it's not enough to get food to people if the water stays contaminated
and if there is poor sanitation," said Antonia Paradela, citing water and fo
od-borne diseases and rampant malnutrition.

The US-led administration in Iraq insists that restoring the battered water
treatment system is a top priority but says it suffered from chronic
under-investment under Saddam Hussein's ousted regime.

Repairing it has been complicated by persistent problems with power
generation.

sc/kir/bp/srj AFP 081315 GMT 06 03

Copyright (c) 2003 Agence France-Presse




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