http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/centralamericaandthecaribbean/haiti/8086398/Haiti-cholera-threat-magnified-by-aid-failure.html
It was to early to tell if it's over. I know I couldn't have read that except that I did.
The death toll rises everyday, and the CDC supposedly has been on the site for maybe what 2 days?
The WHO is out of their fucking mind for even approaching that question at this point.
What has happened to the validity of what this organization used to stand for.
I'll tell you.
They lost it totally, when they jumped into bed with Big Pharma, over the H1N1 flu pandemic, in being their shill for the shot.
It's all about money and since there is none in Haiti, the WHO, nor the CDC could be bothered by the Haitians plight.
They could throw their weight around and try to make the H1N1 mandatory, but they couldn't be bothered to make sure Haiti got the help it needed so that this type of epidemic wouldn't start.
Nations are now only recognized for their asset values, and humans are no longer considered valuable.
That fact has been made quite clear from the magnitude of civilian Killing in the Middle East.
The governments attitude on said killings:
Shit happens, Get over it.
The threat posed to Haiti by its cholera outbreak has been magnified by the failure of the United States and other rich countries to deliver billions of pounds in promised reconstruction funding quickly enough, it was claimed yesterday.
Health officials and aid workers in the Caribbean country were yesterday battling to prevent the illness spreading to an estimated 1.3 million people living in "tent cities" around the capital, Port-au-Prince.
Over the past week 259 Haitians have died and 3,342 have been admitted to hospital after being infected by the waterborne disease, which thrives on unsanitary living conditions. Five cases have been confirmed in the capital.
The World Health Organisation said yesterday that it was "too early to tell" if the outbreak was over or could yet exploit the poor sanitation and ramshackle conditions in the tents, which are home to people displaced by a devastating earthquake in January, which killed 300,000 people.