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‘Race Against Time’ As Cholera Spreads Rapidly In Lebanon - Oxfam

Oxfam warned today of a race against time to stem the spread of cholera in Lebanon as the first outbreak of this contagious - yet preventable and treatable - disease in the country in a generation leaves hundreds of thousands of people vulnerable to infection.

This week, the Ministry of Public Health in Lebanon reported a total of 239 cholera cases and confirmed 10 deaths, one of them a five-month-old boy. The outbreak is across the North, Akkar, and Baalbek governorates, and infections are spreading at an alarming rate.

Bojan Kolundzija, Oxfam in Lebanon Country Director, said:

“We are in a race against time. It is critical that communities have enough information about cholera to keep themselves safe and break the chain of transmission. The multiple crises the country is facing have collapsed the water and sanitation infrastructure and severely strained already crowded neighbourhoods’ public health services, including hospitals.”

Oxfam, together with local partners, has already helped 5,000 people and is preparing to help 100,000 people in North Lebanon and Baalbek districts in the next six months with awareness raising to prevent the spread of cholera through providing access to clean and safe water, ramping up critical sanitation services, increasing water testing, and distributing hygiene kits, as the disease risks spreading through already vulnerable communities.

Lebanon remains plunged into an unprecedented financial crisis and soaring cost of living, over 50 percent of the population live in poverty, and Beirut continues to recover after a massive blast destroyed over half of the city.

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Kolundzija warned that this latest humanitarian emergency is devastating for a country already struggling to cope:

“People are already struggling amid crises that continue to mount and decimate public services. The lack of electricity, clean water, and proper sanitation means that cholera could spread rapidly through the already poverty-stricken population, with the most vulnerable at greatest risk. Urgent funding is needed to ensure health facilities are supported and water and sanitation services properly functioning so we can stop this outbreak in its tracks.”

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