African countries have tightened travel curbs in an
effort to contain the Ebola outbreak, ignoring World Health Organisation
(WHO) warnings that such measures could heighten shortages of food and
basic supplies in affected areas.
In the West Point slum in Liberia's capital Monrovia, the scene of
violent clashes with the army on Wednesday after the area was
quarantined to curb the spread of Ebola, hundreds of people jostled
their way towards trucks loaded with water and rice.
This decision will have an economic impact on the region but it is imperative for public health needs.
Kalzeubet Payimi Deubet, prime minister of Chad
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Police used canes to beat back some locals while aid workers helped others dip their fingers in ink to record their ration.
The UN's World Food Programme says deliveries of basic supplies to
more than 1 million people across Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone are
intended to avoid a food crisis in those West African countries, where
more than 1,300 people have died from Ebola in the worst outbreak of the
disease in history.
The World Health Organisation (WHO), the UN health agency, has
repeatedly said that it does not recommend travel or trade restrictions
for Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea and Nigeria - the countries affected
by the epidemic that began in March.
Those countries are starting to suffer shortages of fuel, food and basic supplies due to these measures, it warned this week.
Still, Kalzeubet Payimi Deubet, Chad's prime minister, said on
Thursday his country would close its border with Nigeria to prevent
Ebola entering the country.
"This decision will have an economic impact on the region but it is imperative for public health needs," Deubet said.
Nigeria has reported 15 cases - the lowest number in the four
affected countries - and the WHO has expressed "cautious optimism" that
the spread can be stopped.
South Africa said on Thursday it was banning all travellers from
Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone from entering its territory, barring
its own citizens.
WHO, the United Nations' health agency, has repeatedly said that it
does not recommend travel or trade restrictions for Liberia, Sierra
Leone, Guinea and Nigeria - the countries affected by the epidemic that
began in March.
Those countries are starting to suffer shortages of fuel, food and basic supplies due to these measures, it warned this week.
Cured Americans
In the United States, an American doctor infected with Ebola left his
isolation unit and hugged his doctors and nurses on Thursday,
demonstrating that he posed no public health threat one month after
getting sick with the virus.
Dr Kent Brantly and his fellow medical missionary, Nancy Writebol,
who was quietly discharged two days earlier, are still weak but should
recover completely, said Dr Bruce Ribner, who runs the infectious
disease unit at Emory University Hospital.
Working connections, they obtained one of only five courses available
worldwide of an experimental drug known as Zmapp, and Brantly and
Writebol split the doses before being evacuated from Liberia, where they
contracted the virus, to the US.
The other four were later given to a Spanish priest, who died, and three doctors in Africa, who have been improving.
Last week, the World Health Organization backed the use of untested
drugs and vaccines, but the scarcity of supplies has raised questions
about who gets the treatments. |
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