Red Cross Ebola teams in Guinea attacked
10 times a month
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[February 12, 2015]
CONAKRY (Reuters) - Red Cross teams
in Ebola-hit Guinea have been attacked on average 10 times a month over
the past year, the charity said on Thursday, warning that the violence
was hampering efforts to contain the disease.
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In the most recent incident last Sunday in the town of Forecariah
about 60 kilometers (40 miles) southeast of Conakry, two Red Cross
volunteers were beaten while trying to conduct a safe burial, the
charity said.
Ending traditional burials is seen as crucial to stopping the spread
of the latest outbreak, which has killed more than 9,100 people,
mainly in West Africa, because rituals often involve extensive
contact with highly contagious corpses.
"As long as people have misconceptions about how Ebola is spread,
and continue to prevent volunteers from doing their work, we will
not stop the disease," said Youssouf Traore, president of the Red
Cross Society of Guinea.
The number of new cases in Guinea nearly doubled last week to 64,
the World Health Organization said, jeopardizing a government plan
to get to zero new cases by early March.
Officials say that locals especially around the capital Conakry
continued to hide sick friends and relatives from authorities.
Traore said he thought hostility towards the charity was due to
rumors that it had been disinfecting schools and vaccinating
children, amid fears this was part of a plot to infect locals with
the virus.
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President Barack Obama said on Wednesday he was bringing back nearly
all U.S. troops fighting the Ebola epidemic in West Africa and
marking a new phase in the battle to help countries "get to zero"
cases. Guinea has the longest way to go in ending the outbreak, he
added.
(Reporting by Misha Hussain, West Africa correspondent for the
Thomson Reuters Foundation; Writing by Emma Farge; Editing by
Crispian Balmer)
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