Saturday, April 27, 2024 | Shawwal 17, 1445 H
clear sky
weather
OMAN
26°C / 26°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Anger as lychee-linked brain fever kills 103 children in Bihar

1245258
1245258
minus
plus

Patna, Bihar: Angry protests erupted in Bihar on Tuesday over the deaths of more than 100 children from a mysterious brain fever potentially linked to lychees.


So far this month 103 children, mostly under 10 and malnourished, have died from Acute Encephalitis Syndrome (AES) in the Muzaffarpur area of the eastern state of Bihar.


The toll may rise with dozens more children undergoing treatment in packed hospital wards, where television pictures showed several children to a bed.


On Tuesday, dozens of people gathered outside the main hospital in Muzaffarpur to accuse local authorities of acting too slowly and of not caring.


The state’s health minister came in for particular flak after asking reporters about the score in India’s cricket match against Pakistan on Sunday during a news conference on the crisis.


“Bihar’s Health Minister Mangal Pandey seems more worried about cricket score than the death of children,” tweeted Randeep Surjewala of the opposition Congress party.


Rabri Devi, another opposition figure, called the deaths “cold-blooded murder”. “Children are dying because of a lack of medicines and treatment,” she tweeted.


Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar was due Tuesday to visit the state-run Sri Krishna Medical College, where most of the children have died.


Media have been barred from entering the facility and the families of sick children asked not to crowd the premises.


AES sets in rapidly and is characterised by plummeting blood sugar, high fever, convulsions and paralysis. Its causes include viruses, bacteria and toxins transmitted in different ways.


Outbreaks have occurred annually during summer months in the same districts since 1995, typically coinciding with the lychee season.


Apart from 2014 when a record 150 children died, the annual death toll is usually much lower.


Several years ago US researchers said the brain disease could be linked to a toxic substance found in lychees, the tropical fruit.


They also said more study was needed to uncover the cause of the illness, known locally as Chamki Bukhar, which is fatal in a third of cases. — AFP


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon