Over 200 U.N. staff in Syria infected with COVID-19 - medics, U.N. official
"More than two hundred cases have been reported among U.N staff members, some of whom have been hospitalized and three who were medically evacuated," the top U.N. official in Syria said in the letter, which was leaked to Reuters from an infected local staff member. Humanitarian workers and medics said the real number of cases is considerably higher, including the hundreds of staff employed by NGO partners working for the dozen U.N. agencies that oversee the country's largest humanitarian relief operations.
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More than 200 U.N. staff members have been infected by COVID-19 in Syria as the global body steps up its contingency plans to combat the fast spread of the pandemic in the country, medical workers, and U.N. officials said.
U.N. Resident Coordinator and Humanitarian Coordinator in Syria, Imran Riza, last Tuesday told U.N. heads of agencies in a letter to distribute to staff that the U.N. was in the final stages of securing a medical facility for treatment of cases. "More than two hundred cases have been reported among U.N staff members, some of whom have been hospitalized and three who were medically evacuated," the top U.N. official in Syria said in the letter, which was leaked to Reuters from an infected local staff member.
Humanitarian workers and medics said the real number of cases is considerably higher, including the hundreds of staff employed by NGO partners working for the dozen U.N. agencies that oversee the country's largest humanitarian relief operations. Riza said there had been a ten-fold spike in infections in Syria in the two months since he last briefed staff, referring to health ministry figures that say there have been 3,171 cases and 134 deaths since the first case was reported on March 23.
"The "epidemiological situation across the country has changed considerably," Riza said. Damascus-based medics and relief workers are skeptical of official figures, saying the authorities are covering up. The authorities deny that but admit testing is limited.
The United Nations has expressed concern about the spread of the coronavirus in a country where the health infrastructure has been shattered by war and medical supplies are limited. Independent medics and relief workers say scores of doctors and medical workers have died in recent weeks.
Witnesses and cemetery officials say there had been a tripling of burials since July in a cemetery that lies south of the capital, where NGOs and medics say most cases are concentrated.
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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