Sri Lanka imposes new tax on neglected lands as dengue epidemic worsens

APD NEWS

text

By APD Writer Jamila Husain

COLOMBO, July 10 (APD) - The Sri Lankan government, on Monday said it would impose a new tax on abandoned lands in the Western Province as the death toll from the dengue epidemic hit over 225.

Chief Minister of the Western Province, Isuru Dewapriya said the government would charge a 2 percent tax on the total value of the abandoned land from its owners in order to curb the spread of the mosquito borne disease.

The Epidemiology Unit of Sri Lanka, in its latest update said that to date, 80,732 people had been infected with dengue and approximately 43.22 percent of dengue cases were reported from the Western province.

A Sri Lankan health worker sprays neighborhood with a fog to ward off mosquitos in January.

This is the worst ever dengue outbreak to hit the island country, health workers said.

"This situation warrants regular removal of possible mosquito breeding sites from the environment. It is also important to seek medical attention to the event of fever by three days of the illness," the Epidemiology Unit said.

The government has already deployed 400 soldiers and police officers to clear away rotting garbage, stagnant water pools and other potential mosquito-breeding grounds, throughout the country.

A Sri Lankan public health official,left, points out Mosquito lava in a bottle during a Dengue fever irradiation work in Colombo, Sri Lanka, Tuesday, July 4, 2017.

The Navy is also presently engaged in clearing waterways in capital Colombo from garbage which has been hindering the free flow of water.

The number of infected people with dengue nationwide is already 38 percent higher than last year, when 55,150 people were diagnosed with dengue and 97 died, according to the Health Ministry.

Both local and state hospitals have been overcrowded with patients leading to a shortage of beds prompting the army to build two temporary wards at the Negombo Base Hospital, just outside the capital.

President Maithripala Sirisena has urged public and private sectors as well as politicians to

join hands in fulfilling their respective duties to combat the spread of dengue virus around the country.

(ASIA PACIFIC DAILY)