WHO says one person dead from Nipah virus in Bangladesh

A medical staff walking along a corridor at the 250 Bedded TB Hospital, formerly funded by the US development agency USAID in Dhaka. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 07 February 2026
Follow

WHO says one person dead from Nipah virus in Bangladesh

  • Nipah is an infection that spreads mainly through products contaminated by infected bats, such as fruit

DHAKA: The World Health Organization said on Friday that a woman ​had died in northern Bangladesh in January after contracting the deadly Nipah virus infection.
The case in Bangladesh, where Nipah cases are reported almost every year, follows two Nipah virus cases identified in neighboring India, which has already prompted stepped-up airport screenings across Asia.
The patient in Bangladesh, ‌aged between 40-50 ‌years, developed symptoms consistent with ‌Nipah ⁠virus ​on ‌January 21, including fever and headache followed by hypersalivation, disorientation and convulsion, the WHO added.
She died a week later and was confirmed to be infected with the virus a day later.
The person had no travel history but had a history of consuming ⁠raw date palm sap. All 35 people who had contact ‌with the patient are being monitored ‍and have tested ‍negative for the virus, and no further cases ‍have been detected to date, the WHO said.
Nipah is an infection that spreads mainly through products contaminated by infected bats, such as fruit. It can be fatal ​in up to 75 percent of cases, but it does not spread easily between people.
Countries including ⁠Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, and Pakistan implemented temperature screenings at airports after India said cases of the virus had been found in West Bengal.
The WHO said on Friday that the risk of international disease spread is considered low and that it does not recommend any travel or trade restrictions based on current information.
In 2025, four laboratory-confirmed fatal cases were reported in Bangladesh.
There are currently no licensed ‌medicines or vaccines specific for the infection. 

 


Climate change fueled conditions for Chile, Argentina wildfires: scientists

Updated 2 sec ago
Follow

Climate change fueled conditions for Chile, Argentina wildfires: scientists

BUENOS AIRES: Climate change made the hot, dry conditions that fueled recent devastating wildfires in southern Chile and Argentina up to three times as likely, according to an analysis published Wednesday by the World Weather Attribution network of scientists.
Some two dozen people died in blazes across the South American countries — where it is currently summer — which also destroyed hundreds of homes, forced thousands of people to flee, and threatened some of the world’s oldest trees.
“Parts of Chile and Argentina are seeing significantly drier summers and more frequent fire weather as a result of carbon emissions,” said a WWA press statement with the network’s latest report.
“Human-induced climate change made the weather that accompanied recent wildfires in Chile and Argentina about 2.5 to 3 x more likely,” it added.
The international group assesses the role of climate change in extreme weather events.
Wildfires tore through the Chilean regions of Biobio and Nuble, along with Chubut province in Argentina, and threatened a Patagonian national park home to trees that can live for over 3,000 years, said the WWA.
Tens of thousands of hectares of land were razed.
Co-author Clair Barnes of the Center for Environmental Policy at Imperial College London said early summer rainfall in the affected areas had dropped by as much as a quarter due to mankind’s burning of fossil fuels that emit planet-warming greenhouse gases.
Fire conditions were exacerbated by the drying effects of the La Nina weather phenomenon.
“Our analysis shows a clear and dangerous fingerprint of climate change on these fires,” said Barnes.
The report highlighted an elevated wildfire risk in both affected regions due to plantations of non-native pine trees that are highly flammable.
And they pointed to a reduction in funding for fire management and response systems in Argentina under budget-slashing President Javier Milei.
“In a government where climate change as a consequence of human activities is denied and nature is given a secondary place, we end up with situations like these, where fires cause more damage than they should,” Juan Antonio Rivera of the Argentine Institute for Snow, Glacier and Environmental Sciences (IANIGLA) told an online press conference.