The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Stance aimed at combating Ebola

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The outbreak of the haemorrhag­ic fever in north-eastern DRC is now larger than the one in the northwest that was declared over last month. And it is more complicate­d to contain because of a dense, highly mobile population and a rebel threat so serious that some health workers say they’re operating in a war zone.

A deadly attack in Beni, the heart of Ebola containmen­t efforts, forced a suspension of work to contain the virus for two days last week. That led the WHO’s emergencie­s chief, Peter Salama, to warn that insecurity, public defiance about vaccinatio­ns, and politician­s fanning fears ahead of elections in December could create a “perfect storm” leading the outbreak to spread.

As of last Friday there were 124 confirmed Ebola cases, including 71 deaths.

The previous outbreak in DRC’s Equateur Province had 54 confirmed cases, including 33 deaths.

The Security Council urged all parties in DRC “to ensure safe and unhindered access for humanitari­an and medical personnel” and underscore­d that more needs to be done to ensure security for Ebola response teams in the northeast. It also condemned “all attacks against civilians.”

Bolivia’s UN Ambassador Sacha Llorenty Soliz, the current council president, said the Ebola outbreak will be on the agenda of the council’s visit to DRC along with December’s presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections candidates.

During the visit, starting on Friday, he said members will meet government, opposition and civil society leaders in the capital Kinshasa, far from the Ebola-affected area.

A meeting with President Joseph Kabila has not yet been confirmed, Llorenty Soliz said.

DRC is a vast country with trillions of dollars worth of mineral wealth which dozens of armed groups are battling over. Millions of Congolese have been displaced by various internal conflicts, including in the northeast.

Kabila stressed in his speech to the UN General Assembly’s annual ministeria­l meeting last week that long-delayed elections will go ahead on December 23.

His mandate ended in December 2016, but he remained in office because of delays in holding elections, which sparked deadly protests. — Agencies.

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