Cape Argus

Conf lict challenges Ebola response

- | AP

THE latest Ebola outbreak in Congo presents complex challenges as the virus spreads for the first time in an area where long-running conflict is hampering aid efforts, the regional Africa chief for the Internatio­nal Federation of the Red Cross said yesterday.

Red Cross teams have resorted to training civil protection volunteers who enter “no-go areas” to carry out safe and dignified burials, a fundamenta­l technique to limit Ebola’s spread, Dr Fatoumata Nafo-Traore said.

Her teams at times limit working hours to reduce security risks after dark, she said, and the dangers are an “important impediment” to aid operations.

“It has really reduced our access in communitie­s because we can’t go everywhere,” she said. She pointed to Congo’s previous Ebola outbreak earlier this year.

“If you compare the situation in the Equateur zone, where we had the ninth Ebola outbreak, the operation was much easier because we were operating in a much more secure environmen­t.”

The World Health Organisati­on, which like the IFRC is based in Geneva, as of Monday had counted 111 confirmed Ebola cases since the outbreak of the haemorrhag­ic fever was declared in North Kivu province on August 1, including 66 deaths.

“Transmissi­on is continuing, but it’s a slow transmissi­on,” Nafo-Traore said. “It’s a complex operation because of the insecurity in the region, because of the difficult access, and also because of the behaviour of the population in the affected areas.”

As often when Ebola enters a new area, alarm and suspicion of outsiders have presented challenges.

Rumour confounds aid workers’ efforts. The Red Cross has noted several: It’s a plot to influence voters before Congo’s December elections; health workers can’t be trusted; the disease doesn’t exist; aid groups are out to make money or dupe people.

“Some are thinking that the Ebola response is a scam,” Nafo-Traore said.

“There are many types of rumours and we need to know about this to reorganise ourselves to convince them that they are fake news,” she added.

ANA

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa