The Nigerian governemnt has banned the importation of bush
meat into the country following the outbreak of Ebola Disease Virus, EDV, that
has claimed at least 1,500 lives, according to the World Health Organisation.
Nigeria’s Health Minister, Prof. Onyebuchi Chukwu, announced
the ban on Monday during a meeting of National Council on Health, NCH, in
Abuja, Nigeria’s capital.
The ban on bush meat through which Ebola could be
contracted, is to prevent the spread of the disease which is being contained in
Lagos and Port Harcourt.
Meanwhile, the world’s “disastrously inadequate response” to
West Africa’s Ebola outbreak means many people are dying needlessly, said the head
of the World Bank on Monday, as Nigeria confirmed another case of the virus in
Port Harcourt.
In a newspaper editorial, World Bank President Jim Yong Kim
said Western healthcare facilities would easily be able to contain the disease,
and urged wealthy nations to share the knowledge and resources to help African
countries tackle it, reports Reuters.
“The crisis we are watching unfold derives less from the
virus itself and more from deadly and misinformed biases that have led to a
disastrously inadequate response to the outbreak,” Kim wrote in the Washington
Post.
“Many are dying needlessly,” read the editorial, co-written
by Harvard University professor Paul Farmer, with whom Kim founded Partners In
Health, a charity that works for better healthcare in poorer countries.
In a vivid sign of the danger posed by inadequate health
provision, a man escaped from an Ebola quarantine centre in Monrovia on Monday
and sent people fleeing in fear as he walked through a market in search of
food, a Reuters witness said.
The patient, who wore a tag showing he had tested positive
for Ebola, held a stick and threw stones at a doctor from the centre in the
Paynesville neighbourhood who stood at a distance and tried to persuade him to
give himself up.
At one point, he stumbled and fell, apparently weakened by
illness. Healthcare workers wearing protective clothing forced him into a
medical vehicle and returned him to the facility.
“We told the Liberian government from the beginning that we
do not want an Ebola camp here. Today makes it the fifth Ebola patient coming
outside vomiting,” said a man who watched the scene. Another witness said
patients at the treatment centre did not receive enough food.
Ebola can only be transmitted by contact with the bodily
fluids of a sick person, but rigorous measures are required for its
containment. There is no proven cure, though work on experimental vaccines has
been accelerated.
Meanwhile, Governor Babatunde Fashola has promised to host survivors of the disease following their
stigmatisation by members of the public.
More than 1,500 people have been killed in West Africa in
the worst outbreak since the disease was discovered in 1976 near the Ebola
River in what is now Democratic Republic of Congo. More than 3,000 people,
mostly in Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia, have been infected.
Poor healthcare provision has exacerbated the challenge.
Liberia had just 50 doctors for its 4.3 million people before the outbreak, and
many medical workers have died of Ebola.
Shortages of basic goods, foodstuffs and medical equipment
have been worsened by a decision by some airlines to stop flying to the worst
hit countries. Several neighbouring states have closed their borders and many
international organisations have pulled out their foreign staff.
The World Health Organization said last week that casualty
figures may be up to four times higher than reported, and that up to 20,000
people may be affected before the outbreak ends. It launched a $490 million
plan to contain the epidemic.
Kim and Farmer said that, if international organisations and
wealthy nations mounted a coordinated response with West African nations using
the WHO plan, the fatality rate could drop to below 20 percent – from 50
percent now.
“We are at a dangerous moment,” they wrote. “Tens of thousands
of lives, the future of the region and hard-won economic and health gains for
millions hang in the balance.”
Nigeria confirmed a third case of Ebola on Monday in the oil
hub of Port Harcourt, bringing the total of confirmed infections nationwide to
17, with around 270 people under surveillance.
A doctor in Port Harcourt died last week after treating a
contact of the Liberian-American man who was the first recorded case of the
virus in Africa’s most populous country. That raised alarm that Ebola, which
looked on the verge of being contained in the commercial capital, Lagos, may
flare up elsewhere.
Senegal, a transport hub and centre for aid agencies, became
the fifth African nation to confirm a case of Ebola on Friday, a 21-year-old
Guinean student who had evaded surveillance in his homeland and arrived in
Dakar.
“People should know that, if it were not for this boy’s
state of health, he would be before the courts,” President Macky Sall told
state television. “You cannot be a carrier of sickness and take it to other
countries.”
Some shops in the bustling Senegalese capital ran out of
hand sanitizer on Monday as concerned residents stocked up.
The house and shop owned by the student’s relatives in the
densely populated Dakar neighbourhood of Parcelles Assainies was disinfected by
health teams. Authorities placed 20 people who had come into contact with the
student under surveillance and were giving them twice-daily health checks.
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