By Roy Denish.
Sri Lanka dengue outbreak response turns to military drones as hospitals strain, cases surge and legal action targets breeding sites.
The Sri Lanka dengue outbreak has pushed authorities into the skies, as military-operated drones now hunt mosquito breeding grounds during a severe spike in infections. The campaign targets a century-old enemy with new technology, but the crisis has already carried a painful human cost beyond daily case numbers.
The death of a young female university undergraduate has sharpened public anger after her final messages triggered widespread grief and outrage. The tragedy has turned a public health emergency into a national demand for faster action.
The Sri Lanka Air Force, working with local health inspectors and the Colombo Municipal Council, has launched a high-tech aerial campaign over Colombo and other high-risk provinces. The unmanned aircraft scan rooftops, gutters, high-rise buildings, and abandoned properties that ground teams often cannot reach.
A recent devastating cyclone left debris and stagnant water across many areas. As a result, mosquito numbers have surged, giving the Aedes mosquito more places to breed.
Drone Push Targets Hidden Dengue Breeding Sites
Dr. Kapila Kannangara, head of the National Dengue Control Unit, said the cyclone left an abundance of garbage and breeding sites in the environment. He added that local government authorities needed significant time to clear them.
Kannangara also warned that several major medical facilities, including the National Hospital of Sri Lanka in Colombo, now operate near maximum capacity.
So far this year, Sri Lanka has recorded 48,287 dengue fever cases and 29 deaths, including five children under the age of five.
Although the figures remain below the country’s worst outbreak in 2017, when 186,000 cases were reported, health officials fear the pace of new admissions. Daily infections recently topped 750 in a single day, raising concern that the Sri Lanka dengue outbreak could become a full-scale hyper-epidemic.
The Western Province, which includes the dense urban centre of Colombo, accounts for 52.12 percent of all reported infections.
Student’s Final Message Fuels Public Outcry
The crisis moved from an epidemiological concern to a deeply personal national story after the undergraduate died following a severe battle with dengue hemorrhagic fever.
Shortly before losing consciousness, she sent a poignant WhatsApp message to her closest friends, writing, “If I don’t die, I’ll come.”
The emotional farewell note, widely shared across social platforms, has become a rallying cry for university students across the island. Student unions and faculty members have staged demonstrations, demanding urgent and aggressive vector control inside state university premises.
Activists say clogged drainage networks, damp construction areas, and poorly cleared common spaces inside campus boundaries have become active incubators for the Aedes mosquito.
Sri Lanka Dengue Outbreak Gets Drone Support
To combat the spread, authorities now use two distinct tiers of drone technology. For hidden reservoirs, the military deploys high-resolution optical and thermal quadcopters, including commercial DJI Matrice series enterprise drones such as the Matrice 300 and 350 RTK.
Compact DJI Mavic 3 Enterprise models also scout narrow urban corridors. Meanwhile, heavy-payload agricultural octocopters from the DJI Agras series, including the Agras T30 and T40, have been modified by military engineers to spray targeted, eco-friendly larvicides into high-altitude blockages completely out of human reach.
Dengue is a viral infection transmitted to humans through the bite of infected Aedes mosquitoes. It causes severe flu-like symptoms, including high fever, debilitating joint pain, and intense headaches.
In severe cases, it can progress to fatal hemorrhagic fever. Epidemiologists say the modern strain can move quickly from mild joint pain to internal plasma leakage, narrowing the critical window for clinical intervention.
Health authorities continue to urge the public to seek immediate hospital screening for any fever lasting more than 48 hours. They warn that self-medication or delayed admission remains the main driver of preventable fatalities.
Hospitals Strain As Enforcement Tightens
The drone operations form part of an aggressive, multi-sector response ordered by the government, which declared a strict three-day National Dengue Control Campaign. Under the initiative, the military has mobilized personnel to support overstretched public health inspectors.
Major tertiary care facilities now report an acute shortage of specialized pediatric and adult beds. Some hospitals have therefore temporarily frozen non-emergency surgeries to handle the influx of critical dengue cases.
As drones identify stagnant water on elevated surfaces, ground teams move in to treat the sites or clear the blockage. Authorities have also adopted a hardline position against negligence.
Colombo District Administrative Public Health Inspector Priyantha Wijesuriya said officials have initiated legal action against more than 4,000 individuals over the past two weeks. Authorities have issued around 3,000 red notices and pursued nearly 1,000 spot fines and court actions against property owners who allowed breeding grounds to remain.
Government directives also require schools and public institutions across the South Asian island nation to adjust weekly academic schedules. They must now run bi-weekly, 30-minute cleanup programs every Monday and Friday to eliminate standing water, while drones keep searching from above.
#SriLankaDengueOutbreak #DengueSriLanka #DengueFever #SriLankaNews #Colombo #SriLankaAirForce #PublicHealth #AedesMosquito #DengueControl #TheMorningTelegraph
