UN gives Ghana thumbs up for role in ending Ebola

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UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon has commended President John Dramani Mahama and the people of Ghana for the role played in ending the Ebola virus disease in West Africa.

In a phone call to President Mahama on Thursday following the declaration by the WHO that West Africa is Ebola free, Secretary General Ban Ki Moon commended Ghana for hosting the UNMEER mission and allowing Accra to be used as a staging post in the fight against Ebola.

‎He said this gesture of selflessness was critical in facilitating the international response against Ebola and contributing to the end of Ebola in the 3 most affected countries.

The WHO on Thursday announced an end to the world’s worst outbreak of the disease, the BBC reported.

The “end of active transmission” was declared, after 42 days without a new case in Liberia.

It joins Guinea and Sierra Leone, which earned the status last year.

However, the WHO warned that West Africa may see flare-ups of the virus. It has killed more than 11,000 people since December 2013.

The WHO said, in a statement, that “all known chains of transmission have been stopped in West Africa”, with no cases reported for at least 42 days in Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone, the three states hardest-hit by the outbreak.

“So much was needed and so much was accomplished by national authorities, heroic health workers, civil society, local and international organizations and generous partners,” said WHO chief Margaret Chan.

It is a huge relief that the most devastating outbreak of Ebola is over. Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea now face the mammoth task of recovery.
The outbreak affected virtually every sector in these three countries. It exposed their weak health systems, which collapsed under the pressure of the epidemic.

Yet these countries are also badly affected by other deadly diseases, like malaria and tuberculosis, which were mostly ignored during the outbreak.

More than 17,000 Ebola survivors are dealing with a wide range of complications and social stigma. They include orphans with an uncertain future.

The economies of the three countries were also adversely affected. Sierra Leone was one of the fastest-growing economies in the world, with double digit growth figures. But Ebola sank it into severe recession.

By 3news.com

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