/ 25 August 2014

First Ebola cases in DRC add to regional friction

First Ebola Cases In Drc Add To Regional Friction

The Democratic Republic of Congo’s (DRC’s) Health Minister Felix Kabange Numbi said on Sunday that two of eight samples taken from victims of a mystery fever in the north of the country had tested positive for Ebola. 

“The results are positive. The Ebola virus is confirmed in DRC,” Kabange told AFP. 

Speaking later on public television, he said the confirmation marked the seventh outbreak of the virus in the DRC, where the virus was first identified in 1976 near the Ebola River. 

But he said the two new cases had “no link to [the epidemic] raging in West Africa” and were different strains from one another.

Authorities immediately imposed a quarantine around the affected area in Equateur province near Jera, more than 1 200 kilometres northeast of the Congolese capital Kinshasa. Medical aid group Médecins Sans Frontières said it was sending a crew to help handle patients in the area.

First British patient evacuated
The UN’s World Health Organisation (WHO) also announced that one of its health experts, an epidemiologist, had been infected while working in Sierra Leone.

Also on Sunday, Britain’s first Ebola patient, a nurse who also contracted the disease in Sierra Leone, was evacuated to London.

An isolation ward in a London hospital had been readied for the country’s first Ebola patient.

Sierra Leone health ministry spokesman Yahya Tunis hailed the man, a volunteer nurse, as a “valuable member” of a team which worked with Ebola patients in Kenema, a hard-hit part of the east now under quarantine.

The sobering news of Ebola’s spread came as UN officials pledged to step up efforts against the lethal tropical virus, which has infected more than 2 600 and killed 1 427, according to figures released Friday.

The WHO gave no details of the condition of its infected expert. It said the person was “receiving the best care possible” although it was considering the option of medical evacuation.

Sierra Leone, where 392 Ebola deaths have been recorded, is one of four West African states struggling to control the spread of the aggressively contagious virus, which can spread through bodily fluids including saliva and blood.

Liberia has been particularly hard hit since the outbreak began in March, with 624 deaths, compared with 406 for Guinea and five for Nigeria, according to a WHO count on Friday.

Friction due to safety measures
On Sunday, West African state Benin postponed a meeting of African health ministers scheduled for early September.

Meanwhile, the Ivory Coast has closed its borders with Guinea and Liberia, just days after Senegal did the same with Guinea. South Africa has banned entry for non-citizens arriving from Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia. 

The measures taken against Ebola-afflicted countries, especially by neighbours, have caused friction in the region. 

Ibrahim Ben Kargbo, the chairman of Sierra Leone’s presidential task force on Ebola, said he was “surprised” by the lack of solidarity among African countries. It “gives the impression that we are pariah states,” Kargo said on state television.

UN pledges ‘strong role’
The death toll in West Africa continues to mount despite quarantines of stricken districts, while neighbouring states have shut their borders trying to keep illness out.

On Saturday, the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon’s special representative for Liberia, Karin Landgren, pledged the world body would take a “strong role” in co-ordinating the response to the emergency.

British physician David Nabarro, the UN’s pointman on Ebola, said the UN would “ensure resources are given to sectors that need it most” during a tour of the affected region.

The WHO has also warned that it could take “several months” to bring the epidemic under control. 

It said on Friday that the death toll had risen to 1 427 out of more than 2 600 cases – with 77 succumbing to the disease between August 18 and 20. 

But it also estimates its count of the infected and dead is likely far too low, due in part to community resistance to outside medical staff and a lack of access to infected areas. 

In the Liberian capital Monrovia, workers said crematoriums were struggling to deal with dozens of bodies arriving every day.

No cure or vaccine is currently available for the deadly virus, meaning patients must be isolated.

Economic impact
The epidemic, which first erupted in the forests in the south of Guinea, is also taking its toll on the economies of some of the world’s poorest countries.

Several international airlines have halted flights to west Africa in a move that Moody’s ratings agency warns “will exact an economic toll” on the region.

Steel giant ArcelorMittal said contractors at its iron ore works in Liberia had suspended operations and were pulling out staff. 

And in quarantined areas in Sierra Leone and Liberia, cash crops like cocoa and coffee are being left to rot as farmers fear to stray from home. – AFP