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EPIDEMICS
US to withdraw troops from Ebola mission in West Africa
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Feb 11, 2015


UN downplays US pullout of Ebola mission
United Nations, United States (AFP) Feb 11, 2015 - The US plan to pull troops out of West Africa will not leave a hole in the battle against Ebola, UN coordinator David Nabarro said Wednesday, but much work remains to get to zero cases.

The Pentagon announced that nearly all of the 1,300 troops currently in West Africa would return home by April 30 even though it remains unlikely that the region will be declared Ebola-free by then.

"This departure does not leave a hole," Nabarro told AFP at UN headquarters.

He stressed that 10,000 American civilians are engaged in Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone to fight the Ebola outbreak that has left about 9,000 dead.

"I hope that they will continue to be engaged and to provide cash and material and elements until the thing is finished," Nabarro said.

The United States has set up a reserve force from the National Guard that could return to West Africa quickly to deal with an upsurge, said Nabarro.

After a drop in the number of new cases fueled hope that the Ebola crisis was waning, a flareup in late January revived fears that the health emergency was far from over.

While the focus of the anti-Ebola battle has shifted from treatment to containing outbreaks, Nabarro said rebuilding health systems and getting economies back on the road to recovery was also part of the task at hand.

"The whole job will take this year," he said.

"I am hopeful that we will see zero (cases) in Liberia quickly... But Liberia is not going to be safe until Guinea and Sierra Leone are also free. I am truly hopeful that we will see that this year," he said.

The United States sent 2,800 troops at its peak to help build treatment centers and set up and command and logistics center in Liberia that has since been taken over by the United Nations.

The US military plans to pull out most troops from West Africa that were deployed to help stem the outbreak of the deadly Ebola virus, the Pentagon said Tuesday, ending a five-month mission.

A force that at one point reached 2,800 has been scaled back to about 1,300 troops and "nearly all will return by April 30," Pentagon spokesman Rear Admiral John Kirby said in a statement.

The announcement came as the epidemic has begun to recede.

President Barack Obama will on Wednesday declare a next phase in fighting the disease.

"We have bent the curve of the epidemic and placed it on a much improved trajectory," the White House said.

A small team of about 100 US troops will remain in the region to strengthen "disease preparedness and surveillance capacity" of local governments, Kirby said.

At the height of the Ebola outbreak, President Barack Obama approved plans in September for more than 3,000 troops to head to Liberia and Senegal.

But the full contingent never had to be ordered in as the tide began to turn in the effort to contain the virus.

The US forces, most of whom were stationed in Liberia, constructed Ebola treatment units, trained health workers, provided logistical support for aid agencies and set up labs to test blood samples, Kirby said.

When an American who traveled to Liberia died from the virus last year, public fears spiked in the United States and Washington officials scrambled to take measures to prevent any possible outbreak.

Although US troops in Liberia and Senegal had no contact with patients, the Pentagon placed all military personnel returning from West Africa in temporary quarantine as a precaution.

Officials so far have not detected the virus in any US soldier that worked in West Africa.

About 9,000 people have died from Ebola since the outbreak began 13 months ago, with Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone the hardest hit.

A massive international effort has been underway to rid the three West African nations of the Ebola virus, and a drop in new cases had sparked hopes that the worst was over.

But the weekly number of new Ebola cases registered in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone rose in the last week of January, marking the first increase in 2015, the World Health Organization said last week.

During the seven days leading up to February 1, 124 new cases were confirmed across the three west African countries that have the vast majority of infections.


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