DUBAI: The Saudi-led coalition fighting in Yemen said on Friday an announcement by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) that cholera cases in the country had reached one million suspected cases was exaggerated.
“It is nearly impossible to accurately determine whether the suspected cases are cholera or simple diarrhoea,” a statement by the spokesperson for the coalition said.
Yemen, one of the Arab world’s poorest countries, is embroiled in a proxy war between the Houthi armed movement, aligned with Iran, and a US-backed military coalition headed by Saudi Arabia.
Cholera flared up in April and spread rapidly, killing 2,227 people but the death rate has since fallen dramatically.
The ICRC said on Wednesday said there were one million suspected cases.
A new wave of cholera is expected in March or April.
Yemen’s troubles have been aggravated by the Saudi-led coalition’s blockade of its ports, which has resulted in a fuel shortage and a spike in food prices.
The health system has virtually collapsed, with health workers unpaid for a year, although the World Health Organization (WHO) gives incentive payments for cholera work.
Saudi Arabia said on Wednesday it would allow the Houthi-controlled port of Hodeidah, vital for aid, to stay open for a month.
The coalition spokesperson also said Houthis were suspicious of vaccination drives and do not readily allow humanitarian aid and workers into their territory and “even loot food and medical supplies”.
The Houthis deny diverting aid to supply their own forces.