At least 50 people have died in Somalia after drinking contaminated water
from a well in northern Mogadishu, an official in that East African country
said Thursday.
Osman Mohamed, the deputy commissioner for Somalia's
Yaqshid district, told CNN about the deaths among those who drank from the
newly constructed well. More than 150 people who had water from that well were
recently hospitalized.
Hawo Abdi, a mother of four, told CNN that her 8-year-old
child is among those who died after drinking the contaminated water.
While access to drinkable water has improved in
recent years, it still remains a major and sometimes deadly problem in some
places.
That's especially true in parts of Africa, and even
more so in Somalia, which has some of the lowest rates of water coverage in the
world.
The United
Nations reports that 115 people die every hour in Africa from diseases linked
to inferior sanitation, poor hygiene and contaminated water.
Of course, available quality drinking water is just
one of several pressing issues in Somalia. The country is also dealing with
persistent violence, much of it linked to the militant group Al-Shabaab.
It was not immediately clear how the water that led
to the recent deaths got contaminated, including whether anyone or any group
might be responsible.
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