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9th Jun, 2026 12:00 AM
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Cholera Outbreak in Nigeria's Borno Kills 74, Infects Thousands Since May

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria, June 9 (Reuters) - A cholera outbreak that began in early May in Nigeria's northeastern Borno state ⁠has killed at least 74 people and infected more than 7,800, overwhelming health facilities, aid group ⁠Médecins Sans Frontières said on Tuesday.

MSF said 7,850 suspected cases had been recorded across ⁠14 local government areas as ‌of June 7, citing the state ministry of health, with infections rising sharply each day.

The outbreak is straining an already fragile healthcare system in a region at the heart of a 17-year Islamist insurgency, mass displacement and ‌poor water and sanitation, raising the risk of wider spread if ​containment falters.

MSF, ‌working with the state ministry ‌of health, has set up a cholera treatment centre in the capital Maiduguri to support ⁠the response.

"Every day, we see more people arriving ‌with severe watery ⁠diarrhoea and dehydration, many of ​whom have travelled long distances ‌to reach care," said Bienfait Tombola, MSF project medical coordinator for the surge response in Maiduguri.

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MSF said it had treated 7,439 patients, averaging about 230 ​admissions per day, with more than 500 ‌cases ‌recorded on June 5 alone, the highest number admitted in a single day ‌since the response ​began.

Cholera, a waterborne disease, thrives in areas lacking clean water and sanitation. Authorities are planning a vaccination campaign, MSF said, as the ⁠aid group continues to scale up treatment, hygiene and surveillance ‌to contain the outbreak.

(Reporting by Adewale Kolawole in Maiduguri; Writing by ​Elisha Bala-Gbogbo; Editing by Alex Richardson)


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