[AFP]
Nigerian authorities said Monday that a doctor in Lagos has
contracted Ebola, the second case in the sprawling megacity as the deadliest
ever outbreak of the disease continues to spread fear and panic across west
Africa.
“This new case is one of the doctors who attended to the
Liberian Ebola patient who died,” Nigeria’s Health Minister Onyebuchi Chukwu
told journalists.
He said that 70 other people believed to have come into
contact with the Liberian government official were being monitored.
Of the eight now in quarantine, three show “symptomatic”
signs of the disease, he said.
More worrying still are reports from Liberia that victims’
corpses were being dumped or abandoned. Protesters, who blocked major roads in
the capital on Monday, claim that the government is not collecting bodies of
victims left to rot in the streets or in their homes.
At least 826 people have died from Ebola since the beginning
of the year as the virus has spread across Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.
The Liberian government had warned against touching the dead
or anyone ill with Ebola-like symptoms, which include fever, vomiting, severe
headaches and muscular pain and, in the final stages, profuse bleeding.
“Four people died in this community. Because the government
says that we should not touch bodies, no one has gone to bury them,” Kamara
Fofana, 56, a protestor in the Monrovia suburb of Douala, told AFP. “We have
been calling the ministry of health hotline to no avail.”
Miatta Myers said her mother was one of the suspected
victims. “Our mother was vomiting. We tried to call the ministry of health but
we did not see anyone. For five days now her body has been in the house. The
only way we can get the attention of the government is to block the road.”
Roadblocks first sprang up across major routes at the
weekend and have appeared in several Monrovia neighbourhoods since.
Deputy health minister Tolbert Nyensuah said the government
was doing its best to collect bodies as quickly as possible.
“We buried 30 people during the weekend in a mass grave
outside the city. The government has purchased land from a private citizen and
that land will be used to bury bodies,” he said.
In neighbouring Sierra Leone, President Ernest Bai Koroma
called for the nation to unite to counter the threat posed by the outbreak.
“This is a collective fight. The very essence of our nation is at stake,” he
said in a televised address.
Streets in the capital Freetown were empty on Monday as
people observed an emergency “stay at home day” called by the authorities to
help them reorganise their fight against epidemic.
Sierra Leone has the most confirmed cases of any nation —
574 — including 252 deaths since the virus spread from neighbouring Guinea in
May.
President Koroma, who declared a state of emergency last
week, urged families to ensure that victims were reported to health
authorities.
The doctor who has become the latest victim in Nigeria had
treated Patrick Sawyer, who worked for Liberia’s finance ministry, and who
contracted the virus from his sister before travelling to Lagos for a meeting
of west African officials.
He landed in Lagos on July 20 from Monrovia after switching
planes in Togo’s capital Lome.
He was visibly sick upon arrival and taken directly to the
First Consultants hospital in the upmarket Lagos neighbourhood of Ikoyi. He
died in quarantine on July 25.
The hospital was closed indefinitely last week.
Meanwhile, Kent Brantly, the US doctor infected with the
virus, “seems to be improving”, the director of the Atlanta-based Centers for
Disease Control, where he is being treated in an isolation unit, said on
Sunday.
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