Skip to main content

Doctors challenge world leaders on Ebola outbreak

New York  - Joanne Liu, President of International Medical Charity – Medecins sans Frontieres – has accused world leaders of failing to come to grips with the Ebola threat in West Africa.

She told UN member states in New York on Tuesday that the world leader’s response has not been favorable, as they have essentially joined a global coalition of inaction.

Her remarks followed World Bank President Jim Yong Kim’s declaration on Monday that many people were dying unnecessarily from a disastrously inadequate response’’ to the disease.

He added that wealthy nations ought to share their knowledge and resources to help African countries. Liu said the transmission rates had reached levels never reported in past Ebola outbreaks, and NGOs and the UN could not alone implement the WHO Global Road Map to fight the spreading and unpredictable outbreak.

She said any military assets and personnel sent to the region should not be used for quarantine, containment, or crowd control measures because forced quarantines have created fear and unrest, rather than stem the spread of the virus.

 The international response has so far relied on overstretched health ministries and non-governmental organisations to tackle the exceptionally large outbreak of the disease’’, she said. Liu said field hospitals with isolation wards must be scaled up, trained personnel sent out, mobile laboratories deployed to improve diagnostics, and air bridges established to move people and material to and within West Africa.

Jorge Castilla-Echenique, Health Adviser at the European Commission’s humanitarian arm (ECHO), said Ebola was now a question of international security. He said as a result of this, ECHO was pushing for military medical intervention, but he warned of the high costs involved.

The European Commission wants U.S. Army and Seal protection teams to come here and produce an air bridge to keep the health workers and aid flowing. Am referring to the U.S. mobile army surgical hospitals that can serve as fully functional health facilities’’, he said.

He said the problem with the military was that a treatment centre of 50 beds may cost seven million euros over one year.
Castilla-Echenique said there was urgency in the response because the clock is ticking and Ebola is winning. The time for meetings and planning is over, it is now time to act, because every day of inaction means more deaths and the slow collapse of societies’’, he said.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Mario Balotelli: AC Milan reject claims the striker is about to leave

AC Milan have released a statement to deny speculation that Italy striker Mario Balotelli could leave in January. They were responding to reports in Italy that Milan president Silvio Berlusconi had decided to sell him. "AC Milan firmly and absolutely deny statements that have been attributed to the chairman about Mario Balotelli being put on the transfer list," the Serie A club's statement  said . The ex-Man City striker has scored six goals in 12 league games this season. He moved to the San Siro in January for an initial fee of 22m euros (£19m). Last season he racked up 12 goals for the seven-time European champions in only 13 Serie A appearances.

Al-Jazeera demands Egypt release four journalists

  Qatar-based broadcaster Al-Jazeera has demanded the release of four of its journalists seized by Egyptian police in Cairo at the weekend. They include its Cairo bureau chief Mohamed Fadel Fahmy and former BBC correspondent Peter Greste. The journalists had held illegal meetings with the Muslim Brotherhood, the interior ministry said. Al-Jazeera said it had been "subject to harassment" although not officially banned from working in Egypt. There has been a crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood since the army ousted President Mohammed Morsi in July. Last week it was declared a terrorist group. In the past six months, more than 1,000 pro-Morsi protesters have been killed in clashes with security forces, and thousands of Brotherhood supporters have been arrested, including the majority of its leadership. A court will hear a case to disband the Brotherhood's political wing, the Freedom and Justice Party (FJP), on 15 February. 'Arbitrary' The four journ...

Obama in Saudi Arabia for talks overshadowed by mistrust

US President Barack Obama sought Friday to allay Riyadh’s criticism of his policies on Syria and Iran, telling the Saudi king their two countries remain in lockstep on their strategic interests. He also assured King Abdullah that the U.S. won’t accept a bad deal” with Iran, as global powers negotiate a treaty reining in Tehran’s controversial nuclear program. The president underscored how much he values this strategic relationship,” a senior U.S. official said, after Obama met for some two hours with the king on a royal estate outside Riyadh. In an interview aired on U.S. television later Friday, Obama defended his administration’s decision not to use military force in Syria, saying that the United States has its limits. The U.S. leader’s comments came in an interview taped ahead of his visit to Saudi Arabia, which was angered by his eleventh-hour decision last year to pull back from strikes against the Syrian regime over its use of chemical weapons in the country’s civil wa...