Cholera aid for several African states stalled by Iran conflict

Air freight rates have soared 70 percent due to the conflict situation. (Reuters)
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Updated 27 March 2026
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Cholera aid for several African states stalled by Iran conflict

  • A disruption of the supply chain will have dramatic consequences because we are talking about an explosive disease
  • Supplies stuck in Dubai warehouses due to war
  • Stocks needed for higher-risk rainy season

GENEVA: Emergency cholera medical supplies for several African countries have become stuck in a logistical quagmire caused by the war in Iran, aid officials said, raising concerns about preparations ahead of the high-risk rainy season.

The stocks stranded in Dubai warehouses are contingency supplies placed in cholera-prone countries, including Chad and Sudan, ahead of the rainy months starting from May to curb any future outbreak of the fast-spreading, potentially fatal diarrheal disease.
Both the World Health Organization and the International Federation of the ‌Red Cross ‌and Red Crescent Societies said that some ​of ‌their African ​cholera supplies were stuck in a Dubai backlog. 
They are trying to either fly them out — at 70 percent above the normal rate —  or buy replacements.
The kits create mini field hospitals for thousands of people, with rehydration treatments and chlorine to treat sewage and drinking water, preventing further spread.
“We don’t know if the kits will come in time, and it will be more costly and delayed,” the IFRC’s Danielle Brouwer said. ‌
Five cholera kits to treat 3,000 people a month, intended for Chad, which hosts camps for Sudanese war refugees, are among those affected, as are tents for cholera patients in South Sudan, she added.
Last year was exceptionally bad for cholera, with more than 600,000 cases in 34 countries and 8,000 deaths globally, the WHO said. 
So far in 2026, the number of cases is down about 50 percent from 2025, but the agency warned against complacency.
“A disruption of the supply chain will have dramatic consequences because we are talking about an explosive disease,” said WHO’s Lorenzo Pezzoli, team lead for epidemic bacterial diseases.
“If you don’t have the time or the resources to control it in a matter of days or even hours, you would have an extreme contamination.”
With the Strait of Hormuz shut amid Iranian attacks linked to nearly a month of US–Israeli strikes, competition to use alternative overland or air routes is creating congestion and soaring costs, the IFRC said.
Many African countries, such as Chad, do not produce their own medicines and rely entirely on imports. 
One doctor said there have been no cholera cases this year so far, but that, if they do return, ​there is only enough medicine for about 100 people in the eastern province of Ouaddai.