Exploding radios in Lebanon disrupt its fragile health system, WHO says
GENEVA (Reuters) - Explosions in booby-trapped radios and pagers in Lebanon this week seriously disrupted its fragile health sector, the World Health Organization chief said on Thursday.
The U.N. health agency cited Lebanese health authorities' toll that 37 people had been killed and more than 3,000 injured in the pager blasts that detonated in areas considered strongholds of the anti-Israel militant group Hezbollah.
"These events have seriously disrupted Lebanon's already fragile health system," WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a press conference, adding that the global body had distributed blood supplies and trauma kits in the country.
"The whole health system came under immense pressure very, very quickly," said WHO emergencies chief Mike Ryan at the same briefing.
WHO's representative in Lebanon Dr Abdinasir Abubakar said 100 hospitals were involved in the response. A series of drills ahead of the attacks and the stockpiling of emergency supplies helped prepare doctors and nurses in advance and limited the casualties, he said.
At the same briefing, Tedros said mpox cases were rising in Africa and the WHO planned to send 33 tonnes of supplies for testing, treating and preventing cases to the worst affected country, the Democratic Republic of Congo, on Friday.
He said he was encouraged by falling cases of Guinea Worm globally. "We now have the opportunity to make Guinea Worm only the second human disease to be eradicated," he said, referencing the eradication of smallpox in 1980.
(Reporting by Sriparna Roy and Emma Farge; Editing by Janet Lawrence)