Thursday 25 September 2014

Quarantined Ebola regions set to receive emergency food drops

International agencies are considering emergency food drops and truck convoys to reach extremely hungry people in Liberia and Sierra Leone, who are cordoned off from the outside world to halt the spread of the Ebola virus, a World Bank official said on Thursday.
Hunger is spreading fast as farmers die leaving crops rotting in fields. Truckers scared of the highly infectious disease are halting deliveries and shops are closing. Major airlines have shut down routes, isolating large swaths of the countries.
The Mano river region, home to about 1 million people and an epicentre for the disease, is a major concern and the issue was raised on Wednesday with the UN secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, said Tim Evans, senior director for health at the World Bank.
“There has been a lot of inflation in food prices and a lot of difficulty in getting food to the quarantined population,” he added.
The World Bank, with the UN and the World Health Organisation (WHO), is urgently assessing how to make emergency food deliveries, or the organisations face the danger of a deepening health crisis from malnutrition and the spread of other diseases, he said.
“This is emerging as an important part of the immediate response,” Evans said. “We are looking at exactly what the needs are and where, and then looking at how we contribute to making sure that food gets to the right places.”
The UN’s World Food Programme (WFP) said it has declared Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone – the three countries with more than 1,000 deaths in total from Ebola – a level three food emergency, its highest threat. It is mobilising teams to get food into the area to prevent widespread hunger and deaths.
“We are pulling out all the stops,” said Steve Taravella, WFP spokesman in Washington.
His agency is extraordinarily stretched. Never before has it faced six top-level emergencies at once – in Syria, Iraq, South Sudan, Cameroon, Central African Republic and now the Ebola-hit countries. “It is a dramatic, profound situation,” he said.
For west Africa, the stability of the whole region is at stake if hunger and disease spread uncontrolled, Evans said. “It certainly is a threat to national security,” he added, stressing that a comprehensive response is needed.
But for Nigeria, the World Bank director expressed optimism that it has acted promptly to contain Ebola by reaching those who came into contact with its first victim there. “It suggests at this point that it is relatively contained,” he said.
Longer term, the Ebola outbreak has exposed the danger from chronic underfunding of national healthcare systems and the need to invest in regional laboratories to test and manage infectious diseases, he said.
Most African countries have fallen far short of a 2000 pledge, known as the Abuja declaration, to devote 15% of their budgets to healthcare. The World Bank “absolutely” expects more lending for health in the years ahead, Evans said.

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