Thursday, March 17, 2011

Cameroon: Resurfacing Cholera Kills 50, Infects Thousands

Cameroon: Resurfacing Cholera Kills 50, Infects Thousands
By Ntaryike Divine Jr. in Douala

At least 48 people have died and over 2000 infected in a fresh cholera outbreak sweeping across Cameroon since January, according to latest statistics from the country’s Ministry of Public Health. Medics say they expect the figures to gallop further, fuelled by widespread inadequate potable water supply and poor hygienic conditions.

Government officials say the situation is particularly preoccupying in the nation’s capital Yaounde where several neighborhoods are recording surges in death toll and hospitalization. “Since the start of the year, we’ve had several cases of cholera in Yaounde and the Center Region in general. Essentially, these are cases imported from Douala. But over the last two weeks; there has been a rise in infections because our country is cholera-endemic,” Fru Angwafor III, told reporters Wednesday [16 March].

The current outburst, affecting eight of Cameroon’s ten administrative regions, comes on the back of a climaxed epidemic last year in which over 500 people perished between May and September. Officials ranked it the country’s worst cholera epidemic in fifteen years. It erupted in the country’s Far North Region, where humans and animals share the same drinking water sources, and where open defecation by inhabitants is rife.

The United Nations Development Program says less than half of Cameroon’s over 20 million inhabitants have access to safe drinking water. And the situation is especially serious in the most populated and rapidly expanding urban centers like Douala. Taps often dry up for months and people have to depend on water from wells built dangerously close to latrines and cesspools, fanning the prevalence of cholera and other water-borne diseases like typhoid and diarrhea.

Last September, Public Health Minister, Andre Mama Fouda declared over state radio that the epidemic had finally been brought under control thanks to massive deployment of health personnel to infected areas, the distribution of free medication as well as free medical treatment. Thereafter, the government set up an Operational Committee to Fight against Cholera. But a few months later, the disease stubbornly resurfaced in other parts of the country.

Currently, death tolls and rising cases of infection are being reported nationwide, with only the East and Adamawa regions spared. “Cholera is wrecking havoc here [in Yaounde]. I am just from the hospital with a patient who has diarrhea and has been vomiting. We did not know it was cholera. We took him to a health center the other day and they referred us to the Yaounde University Teaching Hospital where he died,” Diane Tabah, resident in the capital Yaounde, explained Wednesday. [See sound bite]

The same day at the Yaounde Centre Pasteur laboratory, officials presented statistics indicating that over 70 percent of fecal samples collected from patients at various health centers confirmed they were infected. In Douala, with 2 million inhabitants, medics say the situation is even worse. Figures from the regional public health delegation show that 22 deaths have been recorded from 87 cases in the past fortnight. Medics say the figure could be far higher if all cases were reported.

Fru Angwafor says the government is aware of the situation and is taking measures to halt the new spread of the disease. “We’re calling on all respect basic hygiene rules. About statistics, we had until 14 March 2011 recorded 124 cases in the Center Region with 88 percent of those cases reported in the capital Yaounde alone for a death toll of 9,” he said,

Last year’s cholera epidemic in Cameroon's largely rural North and Far North regions killed 420 of an estimated 7000 persons who contracted the ailment, according to public health minister AndrĂ© Mama Fouda. The Cameroonian government is struggling to implement an effective nationwide anti-cholera strategy. Cholera is an acute intestinal infection caused by ingestion of food or water contaminated with the bacterium Vibrio cholerae. It has a short incubation period, from less than one day to five days, and causes a copious, painless, watery diarrhea that can quickly lead to severe dehydration and death if treatment is not promptly given. Vomiting also occurs in most patients.

Meantime, civil society groups are blaming the government for not drawing up an efficient plan to combat cholera. They argue that the impromptu interventions in the wake of outbreaks cannot resolve the problem. But Fru Angwafor says the government has maintained its strategy which entails public awareness and the provision of free treatment.

He says the government is rolling out a two-phase plan to address cholera, worth five million dollars. During the first phase of the program, which started in August 2010, the government has started to supply water purification tablets and truck clean water to vulnerable areas in the North and Far North regions as well as parts of the Adamawa region. It has also handed out medical kits to local health workers and trained them in cholera emergency response.

Phase two, intended to start last December was designed to address the root causes of the recurring outbreaks. The government announced that over a period of eight months the program will renovate 200 wells and drill 50 new ones, as well as build 200 latrines in the northern regions where people generally defecate in the bush.

Government has also launched a public awareness campaign, during which Mama Fouda called on the population to "avoid drinking un-chlorinated water and eating at makeshift markets where food is not well preserved". He also encouraged Cameroonians to prepare their own oral rehydration solution to treat diarrhea by mixing salt, sugar and lime fruit in boiled water. State media have been commissioned to produce programs in all national languages that will give additional practical advice on how to avoid contracting the disease and how to treat it.


Elsewhere, international aid organizations have also come to the party and are assisting government in efforts to educate the population. But apparently, these efforts have had little effect in halting the recurrence of the killer disease.




USS Robert G. Bradley to participate in Obangame Express exercise

UNITED STATES EMBASSY- Yaounde
PUBLIC AFFAIRS SECTION
Dept Small
PRESS RELEASE

USS Robert G. Bradley to participate in Obangame Express exercise


Yaounde March 17, 2011

The USS Robert G. Bradley, a U.S. Navy frigate will be in Cameroonian waters for a multinational maritime military exercise that will be held off the coast of Cameroon March 21123. The USS Bradley sails with a crew of over 200 personnel and has its home part in Mayport, Florida. The ship will not be docking in Douala but will be visible from land off the coast of Limbe.

The USS Bradley will be in Cameroonian waters to participate in a multinational maritime military exercise called "Obangame Express" organized by United States Africa Command (AFRICOM) and United States Naval Forces Africa (NAVAF) in collaboration with Cameroon, members of the Economic Community of Central African States (CEEAC) and other international partners.

U.S. Ambassador Robert P Jackson stated: "The United States is committed to helping Cameroon and its neighbors stop piracy and other illegal activities in the Gulf of Guinea, and the Obangame Express exercise is one mechanism for helping Cameroon accomplish this objective."

Nine countries are participating in the exercise: The United States; Cameroon; Nigeria; Gabon; Republic of Congo, Sao Tome & Principe; France; Belgium; and Spain. Seven countries (the U.S., Cameroon, Nigeria, Gabon, France, Belgium, and Spain) and CEEAC have vessels and boats participating in the exercise. Foreign vessels involved in the exercise will begin arriving at the port of Douala on March 17. On March 21 the exercise will begin when the vessels leave the port to work together at open sea off the coast of Cameroon for two days. On March 23 some of the vessels will return to the port of Douala when the exercise has been completed.

The command center for the exercise is CEEAC's Center for Multinational Coordination (CMC), which is located at Cameroon's naval base in Douala. The CMC will be staffed by Americans, Cameroonians, and other international staff from the participating nations during the exercise.

For more information, please contact the United States Embassy in Yaounde, Press section Tel 22 20 15 00, ext 4162 or 4273.


Douala: Imminent AU Stand-by Force Logistics Base Triggers Unease

Douala: Imminent AU Stand-by Force Logistics Base Triggers Unease
By Ntaryike Divine Jr. in Douala

Plans to set up a logistics base of the African Union’s [AU] Stand-by Force in Cameroon's economic hub Douala have kindled contrasting reactions within military and political circles as well as among civil society organizations and investors.

The diverse assessments were voiced Wednesday 16 March, as the contours of the would-be base were presented a blend of personalities from local administrative, municipal, traditional authorities to civil society actors and businessmen. The Secretary of State in the Ministry of Defense in charge of the National Gendarmerie, Jean Baptiste Bokam, reiterated that the imminent implantation of the AU arms warehouse in the city would spawn several benefits including jobs, plus additional demand for goods and services.

Last January, authorities announced that Cameroon's economic capital, Douala had outclassed Algiers [Algeria] in a hotly-contested two-year bid to host the base. The decision was reached by the continent’s defense ministers gathered at the fourth session of the Specialized Technical Committee of the AU for Defense, Safety and Security held in Addis Ababa in December 2010.

The base will serve as an arsenal, as well as a maintenance and deployment station.  

According to Bokam, the diplomatic triumph was bolstered by the country’s geostrategic placement; which renders the task of rapid deployment of military equipment to conflict zones across the continent relatively easier. Also, Douala lies on the edges of the Atlantic Ocean, is an air traffic hub in Central Africa and is fitted with grade-A telecommunications facilities.

Apart from being linked by rail to other parts of the country, it also lies on the planned Lagos – Mombassa Transafrican Highway as well as links up by road to Bangui in Central Africa and N’Djamena in Chad,

But transport trade unionists taking part at the public presentation ceremony Wednesday, raised fears the base would entail increased traffic congestion in the city grappling with maintenance and extension of its rugged urban road network. They also called for the speedy construction of an expressway to connect Douala and the capital Yaounde as well as other parts of the country to prevent road accidents, currently killing some 1600 people yearly.

However, Member of Parliament and leader of the opposition Progressive Movement party, Jean Jacques Ekindi scared many by unveiling a worst-case scenario. “People are going to react either by destroying the equipment before it leaves Cameroon with attacks on the base, or just to ‘punish’ Cameroon for accepting to serve as a base like in Uganda where there have been attacks because Uganda sent troops to the Au peacekeeping mission in Somalia. There are risks that cannot be neglected because Cameroon is not used to such reactions and now that it has accepted to accommodate the base, it may not necessarily be a target, but will stay in the danger zone and so dispositions must be put in place to ensure protection for the population and the installations,” he warned.

Other skeptics pointed to increasing pirate activity in the Gulf of Guinea as a source of potential threat to the base. They cited the ease with which sea raiders stormed the presidential palace in Malabo [Equatorial Guinea] in 2008 and also recalled how assailants presumably from Nigeria’s turbulent Niger Delta enacted a six-hour hold-up in Limbe; a seaside resort in southwestern Cameroon in 2009, shooting their way into several banks and carting off huge amounts of cash.

But Bokam argued that Cameroon, which has already offered parcels of land as well as electricity, water and manpower for the AU Stand-by Force Logistics Base, is also putting in place rigid security to ward off possibilities of sabotage and attacks. 





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