Contact Us

Poor access to safe water exacerbates cholera outbreak across conflict-hit Syria

"Finding a single case of cholera means you've got an outbreak," said Zuhair al-Sahwi, the head of communicable and chronic diseases at the Syrian health ministry. He said the curve had largely flattened, with a slowdown in the number of confirmed new cases daily.

  • 7
  • 8
Poor access to safe water exacerbates cholera outbreak across conflict-hit Syria

Shops and restaurants in the capital have tweaked their menus to protect their customers.

"We stopped using leafy greens for the sake of public health," said Maher, who runs a falafel shop in Damascus.

  • 8
  • 8
Poor access to safe water exacerbates cholera outbreak across conflict-hit Syria

The capital remains relatively shielded, according to WHO data, with the highest case numbers recorded in the vast desert province of Deir Ezzor in the east and Raqqa and Aleppo in the north – which rely on the Euphrates the most.

United Nations agencies have mostly been trucking water to affected communities and disbursing sterilisation tablets. But to keep up their efforts, the U.N. children's agency says it still needs around $9 million in funds to get it to the end of the year.