Philippines
to isolate returning peacekeepers for Ebola checks, worries about public
reaction
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[November 10, 2014]
MANILA (Reuters) - More than 100
Philippine peacekeepers returning from almost a year in Liberia will be
put in quarantine on an isolated island on arrival this week to check
for Ebola, the military said on Monday, adding there were fears how the
public might react.
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The 21-day quarantine, on a navy-run island at the mouth of Manila
Bay, was in line with World Health Organisation protocols and with
government's drive to remain Ebola free, military chief General
Gregorio Catapang said.
The death toll from the Ebola epidemic has risen to 4,950 out of
13,241 cases in the three worst-hit countries of West Africa,
Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, WHO said on Friday, calling for
widespread rigorous controls to halt its spread.
"Our peacekeepers belong to no-risk category of the Ebola
infection," Catapang told a news conference at the main army base in
Manila, two days before the arrival of 108 soldiers, 24 police and
jail wardens from Monrovia.
"Our troops have no direct contact with any Ebola victim. Their work
is concentrated inside the force headquarters of the United Nations
mission in Liberia."
The U.N. peacekeeping force in Liberia was set up in 2003 to support
a civil war ceasefire.
Catapang said the Filipino peacekeepers had undergone thorough
medical screening by the United Nations. The quarantine was a
further precaution imposed by the Philippines, the largest group to
be isolated in the current Ebola crisis, he said.
The peacekeepers will arrive at an air base in Manila on Wednesday
and travel by bus to a naval base south of Manila and be transported
by ship to Caballo island, a naval facility used by the Americans
during World War Two.
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Families and friends would be brought to the air base but not
allowed contact, army Major-General Domingo Tutaan said.
The military was worried about how the public would react to the
peacekeepers' return, he told Reuters. To avoid panic, they would
not be required to wear masks and protective gear when they arrive.
The Health Ministry has trained hundreds of medical workers and
prepared at least 22 hospitals across the country to handle Ebola
cases in case the disease reaches the Philippines.
(Reporting By Manuel Mogato; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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