Zimbabwe pleads for help amid growing
choleraepidemicby Godfrey Marawanyika - Thu Dec 4, 9:26 AM PST
HARARE (AFP) - Zimbabwe's government on Thursday pleaded for international help after declaring a national
emergency over a
choleraepidemic that has left 560 dead, as Britain warned the country had become a "failed state."
With its economy shrinking dramatically for nearly a
decade, Zimbabwe's hospitals have no medicine or equipment to treat patients, and lack money to pay health care workers or clean the water supply.
President Robert Mugabe's government has been mired in
turmoil since he lost a first-round election in March. He later claimed victory in a one-sided runoff after opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai pulled out amid a wave of deadly political violence.
The
breakdown of the nation's infrastructure has helped
cholerathrive, with government and UN figures showing more than 560 deaths and 12,500 cases recorded.
In
unusually frank remarks from Zimbabwe's government, the state-run Herald newspaper said the
choleraoutbreak and the
breakdown of the health system were national emergencies and appealed for international aid.
"Our central hospitals are
literally not functioning," Health Minister David Parirenyatwa said in the paper.
The prime minister of former colonial power Britain, Gordon Brown, accused Mugabe of turning Zimbabwe into a "failed state," as he announced an unspecified increase in humanitarian aid.
"Mugabe's failed state is no longer willing or capable of protecting its people. Thousands are
stricken with
cholera, and must be helped urgently," Brown said.
Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga went even further, telling the BBC that African governments must work to oust Mugabe.
"It's time for African governments to take
decisive action to push him out of power," Odinga said, according to quotes published on its website.
"Power-sharing is dead in Zimbabwe and will not work with a
dictator who does not really believe in power-sharing."
Odinga's comments came after he held talks with Tsvangirai, who has been traveling across Europe and Africa to lobby governments.
Mugabe and Tsvangirai signed a power-sharing deal more than two months ago, but have so far failed to agree on how to form a unity government.
Their feud has been overshadowed by the crippling
choleraepidemic, which comes as the United Nations says nearly half the population needs
emergency food aid.
The International Committee of the Red Cross said over 13 tonnes of medical supplies has arrived in Harare, while the World Health Organisation said it would supply 340,000 dollars worth of drugs and supplies.
"The needs are great, we lack the most basic supplies such as blankets and plates in the hospitals, as well as soap and water purification tablets," said Elisabeth Byrs, spokeswoman for the UN humanitarian coordination body.
Cholera is the latest challenge to hit poverty-wracked Zimbabwe as it struggles with a political
crisis and hyperinflation estimated at 231 million percent in July.
Rogue soldiers went on the rampage between Thursday last week and Monday this week,
beating up
illegal foreign
currency dealers and looting shops in Harare, and in Mbare and Chitungwiza, the Herald reported.
Banks on Thursday started issuing a new 100 million Zimbabwe dollar note, worth about 14 US dollars, and increased withdrawal limits.
A 48-hour water cut in Harare has been alleviated, but authorities say they have only enough water treatment chemicals to last 12 weeks.
Charities have warned that
cholera has spread to neighbouring South Africa, where health authorities say the Limpopo River, a major waterway and border with Zimbabwe, tested
positive for
cholera this week.
Authorities initially shrugged off calls to declare a national disaster, blaming the
crisis on Western sanctions -- although those measures
target only Mugabe and his inner circle with a travel ban and a freeze on assets.
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