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A Yemeni child, suspected of being infected with cholera, receives treatment at a hospital in Sanaa on May 15, 2017. Image Credit: AFP

Sana’a: A cholera outbreak in Yemen has killed 209 people in recent weeks with 17,200 suspected cases across the war-torn country, the United Nations children’s agency said Wednesday.

Unicef’s Yemen mission said that there had been an “alarming increase” in cholera-related deaths.

The agency’s Yemen spokesman Mohammad Al Asaadi said that 3,000 new suspected cholera cases a day were being reported.

The International Committee of the Red Cross said on Monday that 184 people had died of the disease since April 27, with 11,000 suspected cases across the country.

Cholera is a highly contagious bacterial infection spread through contaminated food or water.

Unicef and the ICRC are part of a joint committee, also including the World Health Organisation (WHO), that coordinates with health authorities and relief groups in Sana’a.

Authorities in the capital, which is controlled by Iran-backed Al Houthi rebels, this week declared a state of emergency over the outbreak, the second wave of cholera cases in less than a year.

Hospitals are struggling to cope with the influx of patients.

Two years into a devastating war between the Al Houthis and government forces backed by a Saudi-led Arab military coalition, more than half the country’s medical facilities are out of service.

Yemen’s conflict has killed more than 8,000 people and wounded around 40,000, according to the WHO.

The UN has warned that two-thirds of the population is on the brink of famine.

The WHO now classifies Yemen as one of the worst humanitarian emergencies in the world alongside Syria, South Sudan, Nigeria and Iraq.