| 21 August 2014
Angry mob raids Liberia Ebola treatment clinic
David Nabarro, a British
physician appointed last week by UN Secretary Ban Ki-moon, said he would
focus on "revitalising the health sectors" in Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria
and Sierra Leone.
"One of the
major issues is that health sectors and health services in countries
affected by Ebola have really suffered," Nabarro told reporters in New
York ahead of his trip.
Nabarro
will travel to Monrovia, Freetown, Conakry and Abuja as part of his
overall mission to coordinate the global response to the worst-ever
outbreak of the hemorrhagic fever.
His visit comes at a time when affected countries are scrambling to contain the spread of the killer disease.
Guinea,
where the outbreak first appeared earlier this year, sent more than 100
doctors and volunteers to its borders with Sierra Leone and Liberia on
Thursday to monitor people entering the country for signs of Ebola.
An Ebola information billboard is displayed near the John F Kennedy Memorial Medical Centre in Monro …
- 'Utmost rigour' -
The move is part of a plan
introduced under Guinea's state of emergency, which was declared earlier
this month in an effort to stop the spread of the virus that has killed
396 people in the country to date.
"It
is necessary that everyone living outside our borders who wishes to
enter our country be examined with the utmost rigour," said Health
Minister Colonel Remy Lamah.
The
measures in Guinea followed a chaotic day in Liberia's capital, where
violence erupted in an Ebola quarantine zone as soldiers opened fire and
used tear gas on protesting crowds.
Liberian
President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf had ordered a nightime curfew and the
quarantine of Monrovia's West Point slum and Dolo Town, to the east of
the capital, in a bid to stem the outbreak.
People walk under the rain in a street of the West Point district in Monrovia on August 17, 2014 (AF …
Monrovia (AFP) - The UN's new pointman on Ebola was due to arrive in
west Africa on Thursday for a visit aimed at shoring up health services
in the region where at least 1,350 lives have been lost to the virus.
Residents of West Point,
where club-wielding youths stormed an Ebola medical facility on
Saturday, reacted with fury to the crackdown, hurling stones and
shouting at the security forces.
Liberia,
with 576 deaths from 972 diagnosed cases, has seen the biggest toll
among the four west African countries hit by Ebola.
Deaths
from the epidemic that has swept through west Africa since March now
stand at 1,350 after a surge of 106 victims in just two days, according
to the World Health Organization (WHO).
From
its initial outbreak in Guinea, the virus spread to Liberia, Sierra
Leone and Nigeria, overwhelming inadequate public health services
already battling common deadly diseases such as malaria.
Straining the situation even further, several top officials leading the fight have lost their lives to the disease.
A doctor who treated Nigeria's first Ebola patient was named
among the dead on Tuesday, taking the death toll in Africa's most
populous country to five.
Fears that the virus could spread to
other continents have seen flights to the region cancelled, and
authorities around the world have adopted measures to screen travellers
arriving from affected nations.
Vietnam said Wednesday it had
released two Nigerian air travellers from isolation after their fevers
subsided. In Myanmar a local man is still undergoing tests after
arriving from Guinea with a fever.
- 'Encouraging signs' -
Countries
throughout Africa and beyond remain on high alert, with the Equatorial
Guinea airline, Ceiba Intercontinental, the latest to suspend flights to
the whole region.
A Doctors Without Borders medical worker at an Ebola treatment facility in Kailahun, Sierra Leone, o …
But despite the rising death toll, WHO spokeswoman Fadela Chaib
noted "encouraging signs" in Nigeria and Guinea, where prevention
measures and work to trace lines of infection were starting to take
effect.
The Nigerian outbreak has been traced to a sole foreigner,
a Liberian-American who died in late July in Lagos. All subsequent
Nigerian victims had direct contact with him.
In Sierra Leone,
where 374 people have died, the outbreak has also been traced back to
one person: a herbalist in the remote eastern border village of Sokoma.
No
cure or vaccine is currently available for Ebola, which is spread by
close contact with body fluids, meaning patients must be isolated.
Given
the extent of the crisis, the WHO has authorised largely untested
treatments -- including ZMapp and the Canadian-made VSV-EBOV vaccine,
whose possible side effects on humans are not known.
Three doctors in Liberia who had been given the experimental US-made ZMapp are reportedly responding to the treatment.
Researchers
also said Wednesday an experimental drug treatment can help monkeys
survive an otherwise deadly infection with a tropical virus called
Marburg, which is similar to Ebola.
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