This is the second outbreak of the disease in less than a year in Yemen, where less than half of the country's medical facilities are functional two years into a war between Iranian-backed Huthi rebels and the Saudi-supported government. The Huthi-run health ministry on Sunday warned it was "unable to contain this disaster" in a statement on the rebels' Saba news agency. It launched an appeal for help from international humanitarian organisations to deal with the crisis.
Hafid bin Salem Mohammed, the rebel health minister, said the "scale of the disease is beyond the capacity" of his department, in a statement on Huthi-run Al-Masira television.
The state of emergency is an "indication of how serious this crisis is", United Nations humanitarian co-ordinator in Yemen Jamie McGoldrick told reporters on Monday. "This rapid outbreak of cholera is just another dire manifestation of the humanitarian catastrophe that faces this country," he said. "These numbers will increase in the weeks and months ahead," McGoldrick warned. France said on Monday it was "preoccupied by the rapid spread" of cholera, pledging two million euros ($2.2 million) to support programmes "responding to the extremely urgent needs" in Yemen, mainly in the health sector.
Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2017