Haiti’s Cholera Death Toll has risen to 2,761
Haiti’s Cholera Death Toll has risen to 2,761

The death toll from the cholera epidemic that broke out in Haiti in mid-October now stands at 2,761, according to a bulletin released Wednesday by the health ministry here.

According to information posted on the ministry's Web page, 130,534 people have been infected with cholera, of which 79,865 have been hospitalized, although 68,932 of those have been released.

The cholera outbreak led to poisonous anti-UN riots last month as some turned their anger on peacekeeping troops from Nepal blamed for bringing the disease into the country.

Cholera, which had been eradicated in Haiti until its reappearance in October, has spread to all 10 of the country's provinces, but the most seriously affected is the northwestern region of Artibonite, where 813 people have died from the disease.

The sickness, which also has tainted 120 people in the neighboring Dominican Republic, became visible for the first time in October in the central city of Mirebalais.

The starting point of the disease is still not entirely clear, but a French medical study declares that it resulted when Nepalese soldiers contributing in the U. N. Mission for the Stabilization of Haiti, or Minustah, discarded human waste from their camp into a river out of which Mirebalais residents drew their drinking water.

The epidemic comes as Haiti is still under pressure to pull through from the Jan. 12 earthquake that left roughly 300,000 dead and more than a million people without a roof over their head.

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