| 26 Juin 2017
NEW YORK/GENEVA, 24 June 2017 – The rapidly spreading cholera outbreak  in Yemen has exceeded 200,000 suspected cases, increasing at an average  of 5,000 a day. We are now facing the worst cholera outbreak in the  world.
 
 In just two months, cholera has spread to almost every governorate of  this war-torn country. Already more than 1,300 people have died – one  quarter of them children – and the death toll is expected to rise.
 
 UNICEF, WHO and our partners are racing to stop the acceleration of this  deadly outbreak. We are working around the clock to detect and track  the spread of disease and to reach people with clean water, adequate  sanitation and medical treatment. Rapid response teams are going  house-to-house to reach families with information about how to protect  themselves by cleaning and storing drinking water.
 
 UNICEF and WHO are taking all measures to scale up prevention and  treatment interventions. We call on authorities in Yemen to strengthen  their internal efforts to stop the outbreak from spreading further.
 
 This deadly cholera outbreak is the direct consequence of two years of  heavy conflict. Collapsing health, water and sanitation systems have cut  off 14.5 million people from regular access to clean water and  sanitation, increasing the ability of the disease to spread.  Rising  rates of malnutrition have weakened children’s health and made them more  vulnerable to disease. An estimated 30,000 dedicated local health  workers who play the largest role in ending this outbreak have not been  paid their salaries for nearly 10 months.
 
 We urge all authorities inside the country to pay these salaries and,  above all, we call on all parties to end this devastating conflict.
 
 Anthony Lake
 Executive Director
 UNICEF
 
 Dr Margaret Chan
 Director-General
 World Health Organization