Cholera Outbreak Claims Lives in Nigeria’s Borno as Cases Surge Past 2,700 Amid Rapid Spread
A cholera outbreak in Borno State, northeastern Nigeria, is escalating rapidly, with health authorities confirming a sharp rise in suspected infections now exceeding 2,700 across multiple local government areas.
Epidemiological data covering the first 24 days of May 2026 shows the disease spreading across Jere, Mafa, Konduga, Monguno, Ngala and Magumeri, with Maiduguri Metropolitan Council emerging as the epicentre of the crisis.
Maiduguri accounts for 1,568 suspected cases, more than half of the total recorded so far. Jere follows with 834 cases, while Mafa has 159, Konduga 95, Monguno 56, and smaller figures recorded in Ngala and Magumeri.
Health officials say the outbreak has now extended into 29 wards and 124 communities, with new suspected cases still being reported daily, raising fears of wider community transmission.
The situation has also been linked to multiple fatalities across affected areas, with some deaths occurring within communities before patients could reach medical care, and others recorded at health facilities.
Authorities say the full scale of the outbreak may be higher than reported due to delays in data reporting from treatment centres and oral rehydration points.
The Case Fatality Rate is currently estimated at around one percent, meeting the World Health Organisation’s emergency threshold for urgent intervention.
Frontline health workers and humanitarian responders have raised concern over what they describe as a slow response to the outbreak, calling for an urgent escalation of public health measures, improved sanitation, and expanded awareness campaigns to contain further spread.
When contacted, the Director of Public Health at the Borno State Ministry of Health, Dr. Goni Imam Ali, said the report did not originate from the ministry and declined further comment.
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