Dozens die of swine flu in Ukraine and Russia
(Vatican Radio) Ukraine and
several other former Soviet nations are battling a deadly outbreak of swine flu
that has killed scores of people. Schools in Ukraine have been closed since
January 16 as part of to stop the swine flu virus from spreading. Kiev says
least 51 people have already died of the dangerous influenza more than half of
them in war-torn eastern Ukraine where hospitals are lacking adequate medicine
as fighting between Russian-backed separatists and Ukrainian government forces
apparently impacted deliveries.
The difficulties faced by
hospitals have underscored the need for a permanent ceasefire in the region
with the U.S. even pledging to lift sanctions against economically troubled
Russia within the next few months if Moscow and Kiev will fully implement a
peace deal.
Yet for now, residents in
regions of rebel-controlled eastern Ukraine are rushing to local pharmacies to
buy respiratory masks and, if possible, medicine amid a new outbreak of swine
flu.
Doctors say hospitals lack
anti-virus medication and that patients are forced to buy medicine themselves
at drugs stores.
Swine flu, also known as the
H1N1 virus, is a relatively new strain of an influenza virus that causes
symptoms similar to the regular flu, according to experts.
TREATMENT NEEDED
It can be deadly if not
treated well and in time. At least one in five people worldwide were infected
with swine flu during the first year of the 2009-2010 H1N1 pandemic, and
hundreds of thousands of people died at the time, according to international
research.
Experts say the swine flu
originated in pigs, but is spread primarily from person to person.
Ukraine's Health Minister
Alexander Kvitashvili says the situation in what he calls occupied eastern
regions is more severe than elsewhere in the country. "The situation is
awful there with medicine and infrastructure. We need to understand that,
unfortunately, those good high-tech centres which were built are either not
functional or were blown up or robbed," he said.
While more than 50 people
died in Ukraine, outbreaks of swine fly have reportedly also killed dozens of
people elsewhere in what was once the Soviet Union, including in Armenia and
Russia. Swine flu deaths were also reported in Georgia and Kazakhstan.
Yet as eastern Ukraine has
been relatively hit hardest, pressure is mounting to fully implement a peace
plan for the region.
CEASE-FIRE URGED
The terms of the deal provide
for a cease-fire between Ukrainian government forces and Russian-backed
separatists, a pullback of heavy weapons, prisoner exchanges, local elections
in rebel-held areas in eastern Ukraine, and greater autonomy for these regions.
U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry has already said at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, that
he believes Washington may be able to consider lifting sanctions it imposed on
Russia over its alleged involvement in violence in Ukraine later this year, if
Moscow complies with what is known as the Minsk peace deal.
Ironically, the international
police organization Interpol has acknowledged that it already removed names of
several suspects from the time that Ukraine's pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych
was in power from its public wanted list, including Yanukovych himself.
Interpol claims it was in
response to a legal complaint Yanukovych has filed, prompting an angry reaction
from Ukrainian authorities who say he and others linked to violence and other
crimes may now freely travel to sunny holiday destinations. "Now
these monsters can easily enjoy life, for example, on the Cote d'Azur in
France," said Vitaliy Shabunin, head of Ukraine's Anticorruption Action
Center.
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