Author Topic: Disease takes root amid fetid India floodwaters  (Read 332 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline EC

  • Shanghaied Editor
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 23,804
  • Gender: Male
  • Cats rule. Dogs drool.
Disease takes root amid fetid India floodwaters
« on: September 17, 2014, 02:33:00 pm »
SRINAGAR, India -- Doctors in the flood-ravaged Himalayan region of Kashmir said Wednesday that they were seeing outbreaks of gastroenteritis among people crowded into shelters after their homes were inundated two weeks ago.

Patients were also dying due to a lack of basic medical equipment, Dr. Tariq Ahmed Tramboo said. Many hospitals were engulfed when the floods swamped more than 80 percent of Indian-controlled Kashmir's main city of Srinagar.

"As I was examining a 1-year-old child who could barely breathe, he died right there in my lap because there was no oxygen to give him," Tramboo said. He still doesn't know the cause of the child's illness, with many of the region's diagnostic facilities having been destroyed.

"This is clearly an alarming situation," he said.

A Kashmiri woman and her daughter wade through a flooded street in Srinagar
A Kashmiri woman and her daughter wade through a flooded street in Srinagar, Indian Kashmir, Sept. 15, 2014.
REUTERS

The floods engulfed much of Kashmir two weeks ago, leaving hundreds of thousands of people homeless in both the Indian- and Pakistani-administered areas of the disputed territory. Thousands of villages have also been hit in Pakistan's Punjab province.

The region has been left littered with garbage, debris and countless bloated cows, chickens and dogs floating in the floodwaters. The stench of rotting flesh hangs heavy in the air.

On Tuesday night, local officials were loading dead cows from an Indian army dairy farm onto trucks. Srinagar's chief sanitation officer, Manzoor Ahmed, said they would be taken to "a patch of land outside the city where we will be doing deep, mass burial of these dead animals."

Read more: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/india-flood-water-kashmir-hellscape-disease-hits-victims/
The universe doesn't hate you. Unless your name is Tsutomu Yamaguchi

Avatar courtesy of Oceander

I've got a website now: Smoke and Ink