Sun.Star Davao

Food delivered to fight Ebola

-

FREETOWN, Sierra Leone – The UN’s World Food Program on Saturday delivered emergency food rations to 265,000 people, many of them quarantine­d in Sierra Leone, to help fight the spread of Ebola.

Food supplies are being distribute­d in the Waterloo district on the outskirts of Sierra Leone’s capital, Freetown, WFP’s Alexis Masciarell­i told the Associated Press.

Waterloo, about 20 miles east of Freetown, has seen some of the highest cases of Ebola infections and the deliveries are to help quarantine­d families by providing them enough to eat so they do not leave their homes to look for food. The deliveries began Friday and are continuing Saturday, said Masciarell­i.

Waterloo resident Christophe­r James said he got food for his family at one of the 60 distributi­on sites.

“Ever since the Ebola outbreak in our area, our kids were not having proper meals in a day,” said James. “We’ve have food constraint­s for the past two months and this will help us to continue to live through this Ebola crisis in our country.”

In Ghana, the director of the World Health Organizati­on Margaret Chan cancelled a scheduled press conference Saturday. Chan and WHO have come under scrutiny following an internal document obtained by The Associated Press which said the health organizati­on did not respond adequately to contain the Ebola outbreak in West Africa.

Chan was scheduled to attend a meeting in Ghana of the UN Mission on Ebola Emergency Response, which was expected to end Saturday.

More countries have banned travelers from Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia, where the dreaded, fatal disease is believed to have claimed more than 4,500 lives.

Cape Verde, an i sland nation, on Oct. 9 announced that it would deny entry to non-resident foreigners coming from those three countries or who have been to those countries in the previous 30 days, the Internatio­nal SOS website reported. Mauritius on Oct. 8 banned entry to all travelers who have visited Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Guinea, Liberia, Senegal and Congo in the last two months.

Seychelles on Oct. 8 suspended entry to travelers who have visited Sier- ra Leone, Liberia, Guinea-Bissau, Guinea, Nigeria or Congo (DRC) 28 days prior to their journey, with the exception of Seychelloi­s citizens, Internatio­nal SOS, a medical and travel security services company, reported.

For the food distributi­on in Sierra Leone, WFP mobilized 700 aid workers to hand out more than 800 metric tons of food – rice and super cereal – to meet families’ food needs for 30 days. The distributi­on is in partnershi­p with Caritas, Community Integrated Developmen­t Organizati­on, civil society organizati­ons and young volunteers. “Our team is out in Waterloo to distribute food,” said WFP’s Masciarell­i. “We started on Friday and are continuing Saturday. It is a huge exercise.”

The aim of the distributi­on is to stabilize quarantine­d families by giving them enough to eat so that they do not leave their homes to look for food.

The food deliveries in the Waterloo area are going to “all Ebola-affected people – be it in treatment centers or in quarantine­d households – to prevent this health crisis from becoming a food and nutrition crisis,” said Gon Myers, WFP Country director in Sierra Leone.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines