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WSWS : News
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Africa
South African provinces gripped by cholera epidemic
By Barbara Slaughter
9 January 2001
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The cholera epidemic that has been raging in the rural areas
of eastern KwaZulu-Natal for nearly six months threatens to spread
to other South African provinces. Since August 2000, 57 people
have died from the disease and over 14,000 have been infected.
The rate of infection has accelerated dramatically with the onset
of the rainy season. Nearly 500 new cases were reported between
December 31 2000 and January 1 2001, and the rate of infection
continues to rise.
Health authorities fear holidaymakers and migrant workers leaving
KwaZulu-Natal province at the end of the Christmas break may spread
the disease to other areas of the country. Three provinces, Gauteng,
Mpumalanga and the Free State have been placed on "full alert"
and response teams have been set up in all nine provinces in case
the disease spreads.
According to the January 5 Mail and Guardian, there
have already been reports of the disease in Gauteng, Mpumalanga
and neighbouring Swaziland, with local hospitals admitting up
to five new patients a day, and six people have died.
In Mpumalanga, health authorities have warned local villagers
not to use water from the Elands and Crocodile rivers, following
indications that they are contaminated with human sewage containing
the cholera bacterium. But villagers living on the banks of the
Elands, with no fresh water, no sewerage system and no local clinic,
depend on the river for their drinking water.
Hospitals are making efforts to resolve the crisis, setting
up special isolation wards, clinics and re-hydration centres.
Although the "El Tor" strain of the disease involved
is not as deadly as some others, with a mortality rate of two
percent or less, it is highly infectious and does not always present
symptoms. According to Professor Willem Sturm of the microbiology
department at the University of Natal, the number of people carrying
the disease could be much higher than the number of cases reported.
People who do not know they have cholera may be going about their
normal daily lives, unwittingly spreading the infection through
their contact with water sources and food.
Even when patients know they are infected, some are afraid
to stay away from work for fear of losing their jobs. In November,
the Mail and Guardian reported that one patient only agreed
to be admitted to the Somdumbili clinic after he had gone to his
employer with a drip in his arm, to explain his absence from work.
The present epidemic is an indictment of the ANC government
in power in South Africa for the past six years. Universal access
to clean water has been an ANC guarantee in every election manifesto
since 1994.
In the rural areas of KwaZulu-Natal and many other regions
of the country, millions of people continue to live in impoverished
and unsanitary conditions without access to fresh water or adequate
sewage provisions. Whole communities are forced to rely on rivers
and streams for their drinking water.
Even where clean water is available, the government has exacerbated
the problem by introducing water charges. Families that cannot
afford the charges try to save money by continuing to get their
water from contaminated sources.
Cholera first appeared in Europe in 1832, when an epidemic
swept across the continent killing 31,000 in Britain alone. It
spread rapidly in cities like London, Liverpool and Manchester,
where workers and their families were crowded into single rooms
or lived underground in the cellars. Their dwellings had no drains,
or, even worse, had drains that leaked into the water supply.
Another epidemic struck in 1848, forcing the authorities to finally
undertake major public health reforms.
The last major epidemic in England was in 1866, which was part
of a pandemic that also affected Europe, Asia, Africa and the
United States. Today the disease is now endemic on the African
continent, with epidemics occurring in poverty stricken regions
like KwaZulu-Natal, areas suffering from the ravages of war like
Rwanda and Sierra Leone, or from floods as in Mozambique.
The South African government has promised to release extra
funds to improve sanitation in KwaZulu-Natal, and the World Health
Organisation has agreed to bring in experts to provide advice.
But these short-term measures will do nothing to ensure the necessary
conditions to prevent future outbreaks. If the present epidemic
spreads to the major townships, where millions of workers and
their families live in wretched and unsanitary conditions, a major
health disaster could ensue.
See Also:
South Africa: The
ANC government and the AIDS crisis
[5 July 2000]
South Africa
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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