"We are going to start a vaccination campaign to try to prevent a further spread of the disease," Dominique Legros, head of WHO's cholera unit, told reporters.
He said a half million doses of the oral cholera vaccine - enough to treat some 250,000 people - were being shipped to Iraq and "should arrive today or tomorrow," with the immunisation campaign set to get underway by October 31.
The arrival of cholera in the northern Kurdish region is particularly concerning due to the large numbers of Syrian refugees there, Legros said, pointing out that conditions in refugee camps are particularly conducive to the spread of the disease.
According to Iraqi authorities, the disease has killed six people so far, including four in the Abu Ghraib region at the very beginning of the outbreak, before health authorities had set up a response plan.
The big concern now, Legros said, was "a spread towards the Middle East, towards Syria and refugee camps."
Already a few cases have popped up in Kuwait and Bahrain, but the situations there are under control.
He said other countries in the region had been alerted to the danger, and acknowledged that those infected risked bringing cholera with them to Europe.
Cases of cholera are imported to Europe each year, but since sanitation conditions on the continent tend to be good, there is usually no risk of the disease spreading.
"Whether you put a refugee camp in Europe or in Nigeria or in Syria, the problem remains the same," he said, pointing out that if people "don't have access to safe water and someone contaminates the water and someone else drinks it, they get cholera."
Cholera is an acute diarrhoeal infection caused by eating contaminated food or water, with children facing a particularly high risk of infection.
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