Somalia was listed one of the worst Cholera epidemics in the past decade
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- South Sudan: In 2014, at least 167 people died following a cholera epidemic, as conflict drove some 1.3 million people from their homes.
- Central and East Africa: In 2011, a wave of cholera swept for several months across the region, mainly in Cameroon, Niger, Nigeria and Chad where more than 85,000 cases were recorded, with 2,466 deaths.
- Zimbabwe: From August 2008 to June 2009, an epidemic which ravaged the southern African nation during a major economic crisis infected more than 98,000 people and killed almost 4,300.
According to the United Nations,
cholera has become a major public health problem in the Democratic Republic of
Congo.
Thousands of cases are recorded
every year in many provinces of the vast central African country, which lacks
basic infrastructure and where most of the population lives in poverty.
Cholera is endemic in DR Congo, but
usually only affects the east of the country. However, in 2016, when 700 people
died, the infection spread west along the Congo river and reached Kinshasa for
the first time in five years.
Since the start of 2017, some 500
cholera-linked deaths have been registered, according to the WHO. Infections
peaked in 2013 at 14,000 cases. The following lists deadliest outbreaks of the
past 10 years in other parts of the world:
Somalia: Since the beginning of the year, 800 deaths have been
recorded in Somalia, which is ravaged by drought and threatened with famine.
Tanzania: Between August and November 2015, a major cholera outbreak
infected nearly 10,000 people and killed 150 in 19 of the east African
country's regions.
South Sudan: In 2014, at least 167 people died following a cholera
epidemic, as conflict drove some 1.3 million people from their homes.
Central and East Africa: In 2011, a wave of cholera swept for several months across
the region, mainly in Cameroon, Niger, Nigeria and Chad where more than 85,000
cases were recorded, with 2,466 deaths.
Zimbabwe: From August 2008 to June 2009, an epidemic which ravaged
the southern African nation during a major economic crisis infected more than
98,000 people and killed almost 4,300.
Angola: In 2006, at least 68,585 people were infected in the worst
cholera epidemic ever recorded in the southwestern African state. More than
2,750 people died across its 18 provinces.
The disease has since re-emerged in
the impoverished country, which has poor systems of drinking water and hygiene
and limited access to health care.
Haiti: The most virulent outbreak in modern times was in Haiti,
where some 10,000 people have died and more than one million been infected
since the epidemic broke out in October 2010.
The disease was introduced by
infected Nepalese UN peacekeepers who were sent there after Haiti's devastating
2010 earthquake. 200,000 cases were registered in the impoverished Caribbean
country in 2013.
Yemen: The cholera epidemic in Yemen, where it is afflicting one
million people according to the International Committee of the Red Cross, ranks
among the world's worst of the past decade.
The World Health Organisation warned
in November that nearly 2,200 people in war-torn Yemen have so far died from
the waterborne disease, which has propagated rapidly due to deteriorating
hygiene and sanitation conditions.
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