Water scarcity cities can become Corona's next victim
Water scarcity cities can become Corona's next victim
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Washington: Coronavirus is becoming the cause of most deaths across the world, thousands of people are dying every day due to this virus. Not only this, the infection of this virus has increased so much today that millions of people worldwide are suffering from this problem. According to the official website WORLDOMETER, the death toll has so far been 343,983, in such a way, as Violet Manuel of Chitungwiza of Zimbabwe heard a boy on the road screaming water, she left the funeral procession of her relative and went to take water with container and joined the crowd of dozens gathered to get daily ration.

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According to the information, 71-year-old Violet, taking a sigh of relief after taking 40 liters of water for her share, said, "Social distancing and here?" However, she is worried about Coronavirus infection. She said, 'I have got water, but my fears have increased that I have also got the disease.' Even after that, from the water she has got, her plan is not to wash her hands, but to wash the dishes and handle the other important work. It is clear from this that it is such a big challenge to stop the corona in the slums, camps and places where clean water is scarce, where life has become a daily struggle. According to a charity group WaterAid, nearly 300 million people from local communities in Brazil to war-hit villages in North Yemen do not have clean water to wash their hands. According to the group, without any real commitment to the prevention of corona, global funding is going only to vaccines and treatment.

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Nearly a decade of civil war has greatly damaged the water infrastructure of Syria. Due to which millions of people will have to resort to alternative measures. The state of resources in the last rebel-held region of Idlib is extremely worrying, where recent military operations have displaced about 1 million people. Yasir Abood, the father of three children living in Idlib, says that to save his family from Corona, he has now started buying twice as much water. He and his wife have become unemployed and are reducing the cost of clothes and food to buy water. The 5-year war in Yemen has displaced about 3 million people who do not have a safe water resource. There is an increasing possibility that sources like wells are contaminated.

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In Manos, Brazil, 300 families from a poor local community are getting water from a dirty well three days a week. Nanha Rees says, water is like gold here. They depend on the sanitizer distributed to wash hands. Reece and several others had symptoms from Covid-19 last month. Gregory Bilt, who is associated with UNICEF's water and sanitation team, says that connecting coronavirus cases with access to water is certainly not easy without a deep investigation but we definitely know that without water the danger is greater. The United Nations says that there are about seven crore 40 lakh people in the Arab region alone who do not have the basic facilities to wash hands.

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