World Health Organisation staff return to Iraq
By Stephanie Nebehay
GENEVA (Reuters) - The World Health Organisation (WHO) has for the first time since 2003 redeployed expatriate staff to Iraq, the United Nations agency said on Thursday.
It said several international staff had quietly returned to Iraq in late June, re-establishing a "permanent international basis" in the country after 5 years.
U.N. agencies withdrew international staff after the deadly bombing of its Baghdad headquarters in August 2003, but Iraqi nationals continued their aid projects. The U.N. refugee agency recently sent back staff to Iraq.
WHO said it feared outbreaks of cholera and typhoid as summer approaches in Iraq.
Dr. Naeema Al-Gasseer, WHO country representative to Iraq, said a system was in place to check patients and water supplies for signs of cholera emerging after an outbreak which struck several thousand people and killed dozens last year.
"This is our immediate urgent priority and our focus again are internally displaced people because they are the ones at high risk," she told a teleconference.
Cholera and typhoid are transmitted by contaminated food or water. WHO officials said cases of diarrhoeal diseases were on the rise, but laboratory testing had not confirmed any cholera.
The virulent disease is characterised in its most severe form by a sudden onset of acute diarrhoea that can cause death by severe dehydration and kidney failure within hours. Continued...



