U.S.
military ends Ebola mission in Liberia
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[February 27, 2015]
By James Harding Giahyue
MONROVIA (Reuters) - The United States
military officially ended a mission to build treatment facilities to
combat an Ebola outbreak in Liberia on Thursday, months earlier than
expected, in the latest indication that a year-long epidemic in West
Africa is waning.
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Washington launched the mission five months ago and the force peaked
at over 2,800 troops at a time when Liberia was at the epicenter of
the worst Ebola epidemic on record.
Nearly 10,000 people have died in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea
over the past year. More than 4,000 of those deaths were in Liberia,
but the number of new cases has plummeted in recent months, leaving
many treatment centers empty and the mission has already begun
winding down.
"While our large scale military mission is ending...the fight to get
to zero cases will continue and the (Joint Force Command) has
ensured capabilities were brought that will be sustained in the
future," said U.S. Army Major General Gary Volesky.
The troops were deployed to support the international Ebola response
mission led by the U.S. Agency for International Development. The
operation was initially expected to last between nine and 12 months,
said Volesky, the mission's commander.
Speaking to lawmakers during a visit to Washington on Thursday,
Liberia's President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf thanked the United States
for its support during the crisis.
U.S. soldiers built treatment centers, set up mobile testing labs,
and provided transportation and logistical support. Military medical
teams trained around 1,500 local health workers.
"A lot of our health workers of this country died during the course
of the Ebola crisis," Liberian nurse Juma Kollie told Reuters.
"There was a need to have some attention giving to them. So the
American government came in that direction."
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The force will withdraw over the coming weeks but more than 100
soldiers would remain in the country for several months to monitor
the disease.
"We are not turning our backs. We’re transitioning to a civilian
operation that is already supporting more than 10,000 civilians who
are working in the region," U.S. Assistant Secretary for African
Affairs Linda Thomas Greenfield said on Wednesday.
(This version of the story has been corrected to include missing
word "said" in fourth paragraph)
(Additional reporting by Emma Farge, Writing by Joe Bavier, Editing
by Angus MacSwan)
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