A six-year-old girl and her four-year-old brother died yesterday after becoming infected with the disease in a rural area on the Malaysian part of Borneo island.
They were among three people confirmed to have been infected with rabies, which in most cases is transmitted via dog bites, according to Sarawak's local government and housing minister Sim Kui Hian.
"Two of the three confirmed cases... Were pronounced dead," he said. "They were diagnosed to be brain dead and the parents have agreed for the life support to be withdrawn."
Noor Hisham Abdullah, Malaysia's director general of health, told AFP that the cases were the first rabies-related deaths in the country in almost 20 years.
Five villages in the Serian district of Sarawak state, which borders the Indonesian part of Borneo, are confirmed as having been affected by the outbreak. Enormous, jungle-clad Borneo is shared between Malaysia, Indonesia and Brunei.
Sim said health teams in Serian had visited 19 villages as of yesterday and carried out checks on over 6,000 people. Only three cases of humans contracting rabies have so far been confirmed.
Rabies causes inflammation of the brain and spinal cord, and is almost always fatal once contracted, according to the World Health Organisation.
It mainly affects poor and vulnerable populations in rural areas, according to the WHO.
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