GPS News  
Medics fight disease after SAsia floods

by Staff Writers
Dhaka, Aug 10, 2007
Medics in Bangladesh battled outbreaks of diarrhoea and cholera Friday as international aid began to flow in South Asia to help millions lacking water and food after the worst floods in decades.

The death toll was well above 2,000 on Friday with 16 more deaths reported in Bangladesh, 19 in India's Bihar state and three more in Nepal.

Monsoon rains have halted across much of the massive Himalayan flood plain from southern Nepal to the eastern delta nation of Bangladesh, with the focus now on combating a host of water-borne diseases, health officials said.

At Bangladesh's biggest diarrhoea hospital in the capital Dhaka, doctors like Alejandro Cravioto were working around the clock amid hundreds of extra beds under tents to help flood victims.

"It's like a war-zone situation," he said, as medical staff patrolled the tents with megaphones, urging patients to take their medication and stay hydrated.

"Some patients are very ill but the treatment is extremely effective," said Cravioto, the hospital's executive director.

Thousands of villages remained under water, threatened by disease, while millions were still displaced in India and Bangladesh and desperate for relief aid.

"There are hundreds and thousands of internally displaced people camping on embankments and roads where the most urgent needs are for food, safe drinking water, sanitation facilities and shelter," the UN children's agency UNICEF said in a statement.

Several countries and international agencies have pledged assistance and money to help victims, including the European Union which has put up an initial four million euros (5.5 million dollars).

Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah ordered emergency supplies to be rushed to flood-hit Bangladesh, the official SPA news agency reported Thursday night, adding that 50 million dollars (37 million euros) was being sent to cover urgent needs in the disaster zone.

UNICEF is working with officials in Bihar, hit by the heaviest flooding in 30 years, to conduct medical surveillance and inoculate children against disease, particularly measles.

"The situation in Bihar is the most serious and continues to look grim," the agency said, noting that nearly 132,000 houses have been destroyed and nearly half a million damaged.

The Indian government announced emergency aid for flood victims, with Bihar, where at least 1.1 million hectares (2.7 million acres) of farmland have been inundated and 14 million people affected, scheduled to get 37 million dollars.

Early estimates of the monsoon's cost to India stand at about 320 million dollars, though the figure is expected to rise.

The UN agency said that in Bangladesh 7,600 of more than 8,600 primary schools are closed and 23,000 cases of diarrhoea have been reported. The government there has urged citizens and foreign donors to help feed nine million displaced people.

The annual monsoon rains that soak the subcontinent from June through September are crucial for the farm-dependent economies in the region, but also wreak death and destruction.

India's home ministry reported 1,550 deaths across the country from this year's monsoon up to Thursday afternoon.

The figures do not include scores of people still missing from numerous boating accidents.

In Bangladesh the toll reached 362 after more deaths overnight, the food and disaster management ministry said.

In Nepal, the death toll rose to 99 after three people were swept away in a river in the south-west, the home ministry said, although the flooded lowlands had not received any rains for the past two days.

UNICEF reported that many of the 330,000 people displaced were returning to villages from relief camps.

burs/er/ejl/bp/tha

Related Links
Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
A world of storm and tempest
When the Earth Quakes



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


WMO Says World Hit By Record Extreme Weather Events In 2007
Geneva (AFP) Aug 07, 2007
Many parts of the world have experienced record extreme weather conditions including unusual floods, heatwaves, storms and cold snaps since the beginning of the year, the UN's weather agency said Tuesday. Preliminary observations also indicated that global land surface temperatures in January and April reached the highest levels ever recorded for those months, the World Meteorological Organisation said in a statement. The WMO said global land temperatures were likely to have been 1.89 degrees Celsius warmer than average in January and 1.37 degrees above average in April.







  • Boeing Flies Blended Wing Body Research Aircraft
  • Steering Aircraft Clear Of Choppy Air
  • EAA AirVenture 2007
  • Sensors May Monitor Aircraft For Defects Continuously

  • Toyota To Delay Launch Of New Hybrids
  • Driving Changes For The Car Of The Future
  • GM Sales In China To Hit One Million Vehicles
  • US Should Consider Gas Tax Says Ford Chief

  • Lockheed Martin Awarded B-2 Bomber Satellite Communication System Upgrade Contract
  • Northrop Grumman Tests Airborne Networking System For Aeronautical and Land Vehicular Broadband Services
  • TSAT Teams Submit Production Proposals To US Air Force
  • LockMart And Northrop Grumman TSAT Team Announces Partnership With Juniper Networks

  • Russia To Boost Space Defense With New Missile System
  • Russia To Export S-400 Air Defense System From 2009
  • Japan Buys Another Aegis System
  • Northrop Grumman Delivers SBIRS GEO-1 Payload To Lockheed Martin

  • Conventional Plowing Is Skinning Our Agricultural Fields
  • Chinese Prosperity Will Set Off Global Food Inflation
  • Risk Of Contamination Rises As Global Food System Expands
  • Rivers Recede But Millions Go Hungry In Flooded South Asia

  • Medics fight disease after SAsia floods
  • WMO Says World Hit By Record Extreme Weather Events In 2007
  • Indian Boat Owners Exploit Floods To Make Money
  • Rain And Blocked Roads Hinder Nepal Flood Relief

  • ATK To Build Satellite Link Signal Generator With Sandia National Laboratories
  • Purdue Milestone A Step Toward Advanced Sensors And Communications
  • Bridges Too Far As Infrastructure Ages Across The Old West
  • Lockheed Martin Completes Key End-To-End Test Of Space Based Infrared System

  • Successful Jules Verne Rendezvous Simulation At ATV Control Centre
  • Robotic Einstein Wows Spanish Technology Fair
  • Robotic Ankle For Amputees Is Developed
  • iRobot Receives New Military Orders 14 PackBot Robots

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement