Monday, 26 January 2015

Senegal opens Guinea border as Ebola recedes




Senegal reopened its land border with Guinea on Monday, pointing to the "significant efforts" of its neighbour in fighting an Ebola outbreak that has claimed thousands of lives.


People and goods can now "move freely by land between the two countries", the interior ministry said in a statement cited by the state-run Senegalese Press Agency.


Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone have been devastated by the outbreak, which began in December 2013, but all have seen recent signs that the virus is retreating, with the number of new cases dropping week by week.


Senegal said it would put in place measures at its land crossings to ensure people entering from Guinea were Ebola-free, the report said.


The country initially closed its land border with Guinea in March last year as the number of infections of the tropical virus were escalating at an alarming rate.


The order affected crossings in the south of Senegal which were heavily used by traders, particularly during a weekly market attended by thousands from neighbouring countries.


The border reopened in May but was closed again in August after an infected student crossed over from Guinea.


Senegal was declared Ebola-free after the student recovered without spreading the virus, and air and sea crossings from the three other nations have been permitted since November.


The worst-ever outbreak of the has officially killed nearly 9,000 in a year, although experts believe the real toll could be significantly higher.



© 2015 AFP


Medical Xpress on facebook

Related Stories


Senegal closes border with Guinea over Ebola fears


Mar 30, 2014



Senegal has closed its land border with neighboring Guinea to prevent the spread of the Ebola outbreak, which has killed at least 70 people.



Senegal declared Ebola-free: WHO


Oct 17, 2014



Senegal is officially free of Ebola with the benchmark of 42 days passing without any new cases, the World Health Organization said Friday.



Ebola death toll rises to 7,890: WHO


Jan 01, 2015



The death toll from the Ebola outbreak in west Africa has risen to 7,890 out of 20,171 cases recorded, the World Health Organization said Wednesday.



Ebola death toll tops 8,000: WHO


Jan 05, 2015



The death toll from the Ebola outbreak in west Africa has risen to 8,153 out of 20,656 cases recorded, the World Health Organization said Monday.



Ebola death toll rises to 6,331 as S.Leone overtakes Liberia cases


Dec 08, 2014



More than 6,300 people have now died from Ebola in the three hardest hit nations in west Africa, the World Health Organization said Monday, as Sierra Leone overtook Liberia as the country with the highest number of cases.



Recommended for you


The treatment of parasitic skin disease Leishmaniasis in Suriname


1 hour ago



Almost twelve million people world-wide are infected by Leishmaniasis. This disease can cause large, open wounds all over the body. However, not many people go – in time – to the doctor, while it is important to be treated ...





How your friends might help you avoid flu


1 hour ago



A study of social networks has yielded clues about how best to improve vaccination rates for influenza.



Treating travellers' diarrhoea with antibiotics can promote the spread of drug-resistant "super-bacteria"


1 hour ago



Each year, more than 300 million tourists visit areas with low standards of hygiene. A recent Finnish study shows that about one-fifth of these travellers return home with an unwanted companion, a drug-resistant intestinal ...





Zombie bacteria in tuberculosis


2 hours ago



"Living-dead" bacteria exist in limbo: biologically active but not proliferating. Buried in this zombie state, disease-causing bacteria could come back from the dead to re-infect patients. Researchers at ...





Five intriguing facts about viruses that cause measles, Ebola and other scourges


3 hours ago



Viruses are incredibly simple, arguably the most simple living organisms on the planet. They have no brains, no metabolism, and they can't reproduce on their own. Yet they are able to wreak incredible havoc ...



Ebola mistakes should serve a lesson says WHO


21 hours ago



The World Health Organization's chief admitted on Sunday that the UN agency had been caught napping on Ebola, saying it should serve as a lesson to avoid similar mistakes in future.



User comments



Please sign in to add a comment. Registration is free, and takes less than a minute. Read more


Click here to reset your password.

Sign in to get notified via email when new comments are made.







Senegal reopened its land border with Guinea on Monday, pointing to the "significant efforts" of its neighbour in fighting an Ebola outbreak that has claimed thousands of lives.


People and goods can now "move freely by land between the two countries", the interior ministry said in a statement cited by the state-run Senegalese Press Agency.


Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone have been devastated by the outbreak, which began in December 2013, but all have seen recent signs that the virus is retreating, with the number of new cases dropping week by week.


Senegal said it would put in place measures at its land crossings to ensure people entering from Guinea were Ebola-free, the report said.


The country initially closed its land border with Guinea in March last year as the number of infections of the tropical virus were escalating at an alarming rate.


The order affected crossings in the south of Senegal which were heavily used by traders, particularly during a weekly market attended by thousands from neighbouring countries.


The border reopened in May but was closed again in August after an infected student crossed over from Guinea.


Senegal was declared Ebola-free after the student recovered without spreading the virus, and air and sea crossings from the three other nations have been permitted since November.


The worst-ever outbreak of the has officially killed nearly 9,000 in a year, although experts believe the real toll could be significantly higher.



© 2015 AFP


Medical Xpress on facebook

Related Stories


Senegal closes border with Guinea over Ebola fears


Mar 30, 2014



Senegal has closed its land border with neighboring Guinea to prevent the spread of the Ebola outbreak, which has killed at least 70 people.



Senegal declared Ebola-free: WHO


Oct 17, 2014



Senegal is officially free of Ebola with the benchmark of 42 days passing without any new cases, the World Health Organization said Friday.



Ebola death toll rises to 7,890: WHO


Jan 01, 2015



The death toll from the Ebola outbreak in west Africa has risen to 7,890 out of 20,171 cases recorded, the World Health Organization said Wednesday.



Ebola death toll tops 8,000: WHO


Jan 05, 2015



The death toll from the Ebola outbreak in west Africa has risen to 8,153 out of 20,656 cases recorded, the World Health Organization said Monday.



Ebola death toll rises to 6,331 as S.Leone overtakes Liberia cases


Dec 08, 2014



More than 6,300 people have now died from Ebola in the three hardest hit nations in west Africa, the World Health Organization said Monday, as Sierra Leone overtook Liberia as the country with the highest number of cases.



Recommended for you


The treatment of parasitic skin disease Leishmaniasis in Suriname


1 hour ago



Almost twelve million people world-wide are infected by Leishmaniasis. This disease can cause large, open wounds all over the body. However, not many people go – in time – to the doctor, while it is important to be treated ...





How your friends might help you avoid flu


1 hour ago



A study of social networks has yielded clues about how best to improve vaccination rates for influenza.



Treating travellers' diarrhoea with antibiotics can promote the spread of drug-resistant "super-bacteria"


1 hour ago



Each year, more than 300 million tourists visit areas with low standards of hygiene. A recent Finnish study shows that about one-fifth of these travellers return home with an unwanted companion, a drug-resistant intestinal ...





Zombie bacteria in tuberculosis


2 hours ago



"Living-dead" bacteria exist in limbo: biologically active but not proliferating. Buried in this zombie state, disease-causing bacteria could come back from the dead to re-infect patients. Researchers at ...





Five intriguing facts about viruses that cause measles, Ebola and other scourges


3 hours ago



Viruses are incredibly simple, arguably the most simple living organisms on the planet. They have no brains, no metabolism, and they can't reproduce on their own. Yet they are able to wreak incredible havoc ...



Ebola mistakes should serve a lesson says WHO


21 hours ago



The World Health Organization's chief admitted on Sunday that the UN agency had been caught napping on Ebola, saying it should serve as a lesson to avoid similar mistakes in future.



User comments



Please sign in to add a comment. Registration is free, and takes less than a minute. Read more


Click here

to reset your password.


Sign in to get notified via email when new comments are made.









Categories:

0 comments:

Post a Comment