Sierra
Leone police blockade Ebola areas, Liberia declares emergency
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[August 07, 2014]
By Umaru Fofana and Clair MacDougall
FREETOWN/MONROVIA (Reuters) - Police and
soldiers in Sierra Leone blockaded rural areas hit by the deadly Ebola
virus on Thursday, a senior officer said, after neighboring Liberia
declared a state of emergency to tackle the worst-ever outbreak of the
disease, which has killed 932 people.
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Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf announced emergency
measures late on Wednesday that will, for 90 days, allow her
government to curtail civil rights by imposing quarantines on badly
affected communities to contain an epidemic that has struck four
West African nations.
In Geneva, World Health Organization (WHO) experts were due to hold
a second day of meetings to discuss emergency measures to tackle the
outbreak and whether to classify it as an international public
health emergency.
Though the vast majority of cases are in the remote border area of
Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia, concern over Ebola's spread grew
last month when a U.S. citizen died in Nigeria of the virus after
arriving from the region. A nurse who treated him has now also died
in Lagos, and at least five other people have been isolated with
symptoms.
In Saudi Arabia, a man suspected of contracting Ebola during a
recent business trip to Sierra Leone also died early on Wednesday in
Jeddah. Some major airlines, such as British Airways and Emirates [EMIRA.UL],
have halted flights to affected countries, while many expatriates
are leaving, officials have said.
In eastern Sierra Leone - the worst-hit area of the country - the
head of police said security forces deployed last night "to
establish a complete blockade" of Kenema and Kailahun districts,
setting up 16 checkpoints on major roads.
"No vehicles or persons are allowed into or out of the districts,"
Alfred Karrow-Kamara told Reuters, saying the measures would last
for an initial 50-day period.
He said traders who had registered with security agencies would be
able to bring in food and medicines. Security forces would mount
foot patrols to ensure civilians did not slip past their roadblocks
through the bush.
STATE OF EMERGENCY
In Liberia, where the death toll is rising fastest, authorities on
Wednesday shut a major hospital after its Cameroonian director died
of Ebola and six other staff tested positive, including two nuns and
a 75-year-old Spanish priest.
President Johnson-Sirleaf said in a statement late on Wednesday that
32 health workers had already died of the disease and many sick
people were going untreated after doctors deserted their posts.
Schools across the country were shut last week and non-essential
government workers temporarily laid off.
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With Liberian troops being deployed to quarantine badly hit
communities, Johnson-Sirleaf said the state of emergency was
necessary for "the very survival of our state and for the protection
of the lives of our people".
The military deployment - Operation White Shield - is expected to be
fully in place by Friday, officials said.
In the ramshackle, ocean-front capital, residents greeted the
announcement with alarm.
"This is the beginning of hardship. Ninety days of fear and
suffering," said Nancy Poure, a small trader in the suburb of
Johnsonville. "We need help from America. We need help."
After a trial drug was administered to two U.S. charity workers
infected in Liberia, three of the world's leading Ebola specialists
urged the WHO to offer people in West Africa the chance to take
experimental drugs to fight the disease.
Liberian authorities have said they are willing to authorise
in-country clinical trials. U.S. President Barack Obama said on
Wednesday he lacked enough information to approve the use of
experimental drugs, adding that Ebola could be controlled with a
strong public health response.
The WHO said it would ask medical ethics experts to explore
emergency use of experimental treatments.
(Writing by Daniel Flynn; Editing by Will Waterman)
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