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Death toll tops 1,100 from Zimbabwe cholera

The death toll from a cholera epidemic in Zimbabwe has soared to 1,111, the United Nations said on Thursday, adding to pressure for a quick solution to the crisis in the southern African country.
Image: Zimbabweans suffering from cholera
A picture taken in December 2008 and released by NGO Oxfam shows Zimbabweans suffering from cholera at the Budiriro Cholera Clinic, a clinic that has been set up to deal with the influx of cholera cases, in Harare. South African President Kgalema Motlanthe announced Wednesday that the region was launching an urgent international campaign to assist Zimbabwe with a humanitarian crisis amid a cholera outbreak. AFP PHOTO / OXFAM == RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - NO SALES == (Photo credit should read ROBIN HAMMOND/AFP/Getty Images)Robin Hammond / AFP - Getty Images
/ Source: The Associated Press

The death toll from a cholera epidemic in Zimbabwe has soared to 1,111, the United Nations said on Thursday, adding to pressure for a quick solution to the crisis in the southern African country.

South African ruling ANC leader Jacob Zuma backed a diplomatic push as the way to end political deadlock and rejected any suggestion of sending troops.

The latest cholera figures from the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in Geneva included a new outbreak in Chegutu Urban in Mashonaland West, west of Harare, where more than 378 cases and 121 deaths have been recorded, it said in a statement.

It said more than 20,580 people had been affected by cholera since August.

The cholera epidemic has added to pressure on President Robert Mugabe and Western countries have renewed calls on the veteran leader to step down.

Mugabe agreed to share power with opposition leader Morgan Tsvanigrai in September, raising hopes of a power-sharing government that could bring the country back from economic meltdown.

But negotiations are deadlocked over who should control key ministries.

Prominent figures, including Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga and Nobel peace laureate and South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu, have called for Mugabe to go or for peacekeeping troops to be sent to Zimbabwe.

When asked in an interview with South Africa's 702 Talk Radio whether he favored sending troops to Zimbabwe, ANC leader Zuma said: "No. Why military intervention when there is no war? We should be pressurizing them to see the light."

South Africa's ANC-led government, however, has continued to back the regional SADC group's efforts to mediate an end to the crisis. Former South African President Thabo Mbeki is leading the mediation of the power-sharing talks.

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