Fiche du document numéro 9478

Num
9478
Date
Monday July 25, 1994
Amj
Auteur
Fichier
Taille
108960
Titre
Cholera Claims 2,000 Rwandan Victims a Day in Refugee Camps
Soustitre
By Sam Kiley in Mugunga Camp, Zaire.
Source
Type
Article de journal
Langue
EN
Citation
RWANDAN refugees began to pour back into their homeland from the
disease-ridden camps in Zaire yesterday as aid workers reported up to
2,000 people dying of cholera every day and said that the toll could
reach 80,000.

A thousand Hutu peasants crossed back into Rwanda after Zaire's
president reopened the border; thousands were said to be on the road,
while still more were reported to have returned home through the bush.

The United Nations and the new Rwandan government have both appealed to
refugees to go back, and the victorious Rwandan Patriotic Front has
promised that there will be no reprisals against the Hutus.

Aid workers hope that yesterday's vanguard will be the start of a flood
as the plight of refugees in the camps worsened in spite of the first
of America's airdrops. Three C-130 aircraft flew 60,000lb of meat,
flour, biscuits, rice and sugar from Entebbe in Uganda to the UNHCR
north of Goma, but aid workers claimed that they had missed their
target. One pallet of almost hit a French military helicopter on the
ground. A US military spokesman denied that the drop had been
off-target.

Workers on the ground were still waiting for water the only hope of
stopping cholera.

About 8,000 people are estimated to have died of the disease in
stinking camps clouded with black mist from volcanic ash. Things are
going to get a lot, lot worse,
Mike McDonaugh, of Concern Worldwide,
said. There is an immediate need for hundreds of aid workers. We
simply cannot cope.


At the Mugunga camp, the team of 15 doctors and nurses ran out of
intravenous fluids for treating cholera victims. We will have to buy
more in the town, where, as usual, we will be massively overcharged
,
Claude Mocorge of Medecins Sans Frontieres said. He was standing next
to a 200 square yard area covered in corpses, and waiting for more
lorries to arrive.

Israel is airlifting an 120-bed field hospital, 80 tonnes of medical
supplies and a medical team to Goma.
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