Tag: Ebola

  • CAF decides on 2015 AFCON Monday

    CAF decides on 2015 AFCON Monday

    A decision on whether the African Nations Cup finals will go ahead in January or be postponed because of fears over the Ebola virus is expected on Monday after the Moroccan government meets with Confederation of African Football leaders.

    The meeting in Rabat was fixed last month when Morocco wrote to CAF asking it to postpone the tournament after being advised by its own health ministry that hosting the 16-team tournament posed a risk of the spread of the deadly virus.

    CAF immediately rejected the notion, insisting the three-week tournament go ahead as scheduled from January 17 to February 8, Reuters reports.

    Anticipating the possibility Morocco’s government would stand firm, CAF has since asked seven countries if they might be able to step in as emergency hosts at short notice but not received a positive response, adding to the importance of Monday’s discourse.

    But the meeting has been pre-empted in part by discussions last week when a Moroccan delegation flew to Cameroon to meet CAF president Issa Hayatou to “explain” its position, Morocco’s state news agency said.

    Other Moroccan press reports said a decision had been made to move the finals to June, but CAF moved quickly to deny them.

    A meeting of the executive committee of African football’s governing body in Algiers on Sunday was to decide CAF’s position for Monday’s talks and officials said a possible statement on the outcome could come as early as Monday.

  • Nigeria, Ebola and Western media

    Nigeria, Ebola and Western media

    SIR: Virtually all western/international media have been chattering on Nigeria’s successful campaign against the Ebola outbreak. Many of them even go as far as asking what lessons the West can learn from Nigeria’s handling of the crises. The World Health Organization declared Nigeria Ebola free last Monday.

    I find it interesting and amusing, albeit not surprising that the western media machinery (mostly US based) who have been perennially scornful of anything Nigerian are the ones giving overwhelmingly positive reviews of the country.

    For starters, the world’s most powerful nation has been hit with the Ebola virus and has been grappling gracelessly to rein in the scourge; also its peoples are paralyzed with fear. I read an article in The Daily Beast about doctors in the US complaining that their clinics are being overrun by Ebola scares. So it’s a situation where Western media now realize that those who live in glass houses don’t throw stones.

    Secondly, a ‘Now I see’ moment has suddenly dawned on the ‘Can anything good or right come out of Nigeria/Africa?’ mentality that pervades western media. Nobody in the West ever thought any African nation could successfully deal with the Ebola outbreak let alone Western media who all kept reporting paralyzing and heart-wrenching stories of the outbreak.

    And even with the glaring success Nigeria has recorded, there are still some western media folks with the mentality of “Until I get to Nigeria and thrust my hand in the sides and palms of Nigerians without contacting the Ebola virus I will not believe Nigeria is Ebola free”.

    Last Monday for instance, after reporting that the WHO had declared Nigeria Ebola free, Bloomberg’s Stephanie Ruhle asked her Market Makers co-host Erik Schatzker whether he believes Nigeria is really Ebola free, to which he responded “Why would WHO say that if it’s not true?” She then retorted: “You know what, I don’t know what I believe about Ebola these days”

    Ruhle’s response is emblematic in part, of the general western media skepticism about African capacity to deal with the virus, but mostly of the fear the Ebola virus has instilled the US.

    Yes, the federal government through the Federal Ministry of Health, ably headed by Prof. Onyeabuchi Chukwu, the Lagos State government, supporting Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) and relevant NGOs developed and maintained in real time a highly coordinated strategic and tactical structure/mechanism to battle Ebola as soon as it broke out in Nigeria.

    Nigeria conquered the Ebola scourge largely due to the harmonious response of its citizenry especially to the fear of the virus.

    In the end, Nigeria did not close her borders, nor did she restrict flights and yet conquered Ebola virus because she refused to be overrun by the fear of it.

    If the US and other West African nations are looking for some lessons to learn other than the strategic and tactical approach of the Nigerian government, it should be the response of Nigerians to the fear of the virus, as the saying goes ‘the fear of death is to be more dreaded than death itself’; so also should the fear of Ebola be dreaded than the virus itself.

    It is the fear of the virus that is engendering fear mongering about the possibility of airborne Ebola in the US right now; it was the fear of the virus that led villagers in Guinea to butcher health workers and pastors who had in fact come to help them.

    Fear prompts paralysis and breeds paranoia and its consequences can be, and are tragic. Once the fear of the virus pervades, the spread of the virus overtakes any efforts made or progress gained. Nigerians couldn’t afford the consequences of fear and thus adopted the agencies of humour and prayers to complement government efforts.

    Now that’s a simple lesson worth learning.

    • Dolapo Ajala,

     

  • Still on Ebola

    When recently the World Health Organization (WHO) gave Nigeria a clean bill of health on the Ebola pandemic, it left no one in doubt that the clearance was largely provisional. WHO country director in Abuja, Dr. Rui Gama Vaz while full of praises for the country for its efforts in checking the spread, had then warned “we have only won a battle; the war will end when West Africa is also declared free of Ebola”. And if one may add, the war will be completely won when the world has been declared free of Ebola.

    The warning became necessary with the ravaging of the disease in the West African countries of Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea. But it has also reared its ugly head in some western countries of the world including the United States of America. Since the world has become a global community, there is still every possibility for someone else to bring the disease into our shores. And the chances are very high. After all, the disease was brought into the country in the first instance, by a Liberian.

    It therefore calls for the stepping up of all those precautionary measures that were put in place as the disease lived with us. The warning became more compelling given the prevailing high level of illiteracy and ignorance in the country. Even as the disease was being battled, there were those opposed to some of the temporary precautionary measures put in place to contain its spread. We saw this opposition in some churches that introduced measures to limit body contact as their contribution to checking the spread. There were even spurious claims of capacity to cure the disease by so-called faith healers even with the efforts of the federal and Lagos State governments to engage them not to admit Ebola patients.

    There were others against the advice to shun certain practices including the consumption of bush meat. Such people may go haywire if it is not sufficiently drummed into their ears that danger still lurks in the air. That was the aim of the advisory from the WHO chief and it goes without saying.

    Expectedly, our governments have stepped up the screening of travelers at the airports and all entry points into the country. Good as these measures are, they may not be adequate given the very porous nature of our borders. This is especially so in the northern parts of the country where the authorities do not even seem to have a correct idea of the number of entry points. And without the necessary records as to the nation’s porous and unmanned borders, the risk of further spread is better imagined. Added to this risk is the inability to differentiate between citizens of neighbouring countries especially in the north-east flank and our citizens because of cultural, religious and language similarities. If therefore there is an outbreak of the virus in those neighbouring countries, chances are that it will spread very fast into this country. Our leaders need to pay special attention to this else we may have to pay very dearly for it.   The current battle against the Boko Haram insurgents has revealed the glaring security loopholes that exist in that part of the country. There is a compelling need to take a more serious view of such illegal entry points from Chad, Niger and Cameroon. We should still count ourselves lucky there has been no reported incident of the virus in those countries especially as they may not possess the necessary capacity to track down the disease the same way Nigeria did.

    That the danger is not yet over was vividly illustrate by the pandemonium at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport last week when a suspected Ebola patient arrived the country. Reports had that the Nigerian who had been cured of the disease arrived in company of a Nigerian diplomat to underscore the point that he has a clean bill of health and should not be stigmatized. But that was not to be. The realization that he had suffered the disease threw those at the airport into panic despite the fact that he was accompanied by a Nigerian diplomat as evidence he was Ebola free.

    Such is the level of fear which the virus has inflicted on the psyche of our people. This should not surprise anyone given its lethality and mortality rate.

    It is thus instructive that there must be concerted efforts from the various levels of government and citizens alike to ensure that neither foreigners nor our citizens are again allowed to come into the country with the disease undetected. In this regard, the federal government has more roles to play given its constitutional responsibilities. That is why the undue politicization of which level of government should take credit for the success that was the outcome of the battle against Ebola was unnecessary.

    The WHO country director and the former minister of health, Prof Onyebuchi Chukwu captured the issues involved very succinctly the very day Nigeria was declared Ebola free after 42 days or double the incubation period of 21 days with no new case.

    For Vaz, the credit should go the government of the Federal Republic of Nigeria through President Jonathan, the people of Nigeria and all stakeholders and development partners.

    Chukwu’s list was more inclusive. Apparently responding to claims and counter claims on who should take the credit for the success, he said the feat was recorded because of the distinctive leadership of President Jonathan. He then went on to acknowledge the roles played by the federal ministry of health and its agencies- the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and the Port Health Service, the ministries of health of Lagos, Enugu and Rivers, WHO, UNICEF, the US Centre for Disease Control and Prevention and other partners who were part of the team. But he left nobody in doubt that he considered it the greatest achievement of his ministry as he was resigning to pursue his governorship ambition in Ebonyi State. How this success will count in his new endeavour will be borne out with time. But there is no doubt Chukwu did very well in the management of the Ebola crisis and left when the ovation was loudest. Whether it was by a stroke of luck or through painstaking efforts, he will live to take the credit for successfully waging a decisive war against Ebola on these shores.

    Beyond the matter of chest-beating, the war is not yet over. Those who want to savour the credit for the Ebola battle still have much to do by the way they prepare to wage a conclusive war against it. Reports from surviving victims of the virus speak of the absence of facilities on the part of governments to take on the scourge. The temporary relief period from the WHO clearance should now enable the various governments put in place sufficient facilities to take on the scourge if and when the need arises.

    More fundamentally, effective screening at our entry points and aggressive enlightenment programmes are all in dire need to keep the virus off our shores.

  • Ebola: Minister summons ambassadors over discrimination, stigmatization

    Ebola: Minister summons ambassadors over discrimination, stigmatization

    The Federal Government has officially protested  the stigmatization of the country over the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) outbreak.

    The killer-virus was imported into the country by the late Patrick Sawyer, a Liberian-American in July, resulting in the death of seven people including the Liberian himself.

    Nigeria was able to contain the spread of the virus, while at the same time treated over 12 others who had either primary or secondary contacts with the index (Sawyer).

    On October 20, the World Health Organization (WHO)  gave Nigeria a clean bill of health.

    But the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Aminu Wali,  noted that despite this, countries still discriminate against Nigerians, a situation he strongly frowned against warning that such profiling of the country will not be acceptable.

    The minister listed China, Turkey, Ukraine, South Africa among the sixteen countries discriminating against Nigeria.

    Others are Bahrain, Cameroun, Egypt, Hong-Kong, Cote d’voire, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Cuba, Kuwait, Qater, Sri Lanka, Zambia, United Arab Emirates, South Sudan, Seychelles, Mauritania and Sao Tome &Principe and Namibia.

    The minister said: It is disappointing that inspite of the decisive measures taken by the Federal Government of Nigeria and the subsequent positive declaration by the WHO, some countries have regrettably chosen to flout the WHO rules on the virus by adopting deliberate policies of stigmatization and discrimination against Nigerians simply because we were unfortunately exposed to the virus.

    “I will like to make it categorically clear that the continued discrimination and profiling of Nigeria is not acceptable to the government and people of Nigeria. Since the index case was brought to Nigeria, we have received unpleasant reports from a number of otherwise friendly countries targeting and discriminating against our nationals.”

    He added: “Indeed, rather than institute discriminatory practices, the international community should increase assistance to countries afflicted with the deadly Ebola Virus, with practical solutions to the problem that is beginning to respect no boundary.”

    He further assured the gathering that Nigeria would continue to assist the affected countries and also share experience on the successful control of the virus with the rest of the world.

    The minister also warned the diplomatic corps against middling in the internal issues of the country, stressing “I avail myself of this medium to inform you that the Federal Government has also noted with deep concern that some heads  of mission are in the habit of making inflammatory and reckless statements against the government on matters of domestic policy.”

    This, he said, “is an unacceptable interference in Nigeria’s internal affairs. Such envoys are advised to respect the sensitivity of Nigerians.”

  • Ebola: FG summons ambassadors over discrimination, stigmatization

    Ebola: FG summons ambassadors over discrimination, stigmatization

    …South Africa, Turkey, Ukraine, China, 12 others listed

    The Federal Government has officially protested the stigmatization of Nigerians over the Ebola Virus Disease outbreak.

    The killer-virus was imported into the country by the late Patrick Sawyer, a Liberian-American in July, resulting in the death of seven people including the Liberian himself.

    Nigeria was however able to contain the spread of the virus, while at the same time treated over 12 others who had either primary or secondary contact with the index (Sawyer).

    The last time Nigeria recorded any case of the virus was on August 20 and the country has been declared free of Ebola by the World Health Organization.

    But the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Amb. Aminu Wali, on Friday noted that despite this, countries still discriminate against Nigerians, a situation he strongly frowned against, warning that such act will not be accepted by the government.

    The minister listed China, Turkey, Ukraine and South Africa as some of the countries discriminating against Nigerians.

    Others are -Bahrain, Cameroun, Egypt, Hong-Kong, Cote d’Ivoire, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Cuba, Kuwait, Qatar, Sri Lanka, Zambia, United Arab Emirates, South Sudan, Seychelles, Mauritania, Sao Tome &Principe and Namibia.

    The minister said: “It is however disappointing and worrisome that despite the decisive measures taken by the Federal Government of Nigeria on Ebola and the subsequent positive declaration by WHO, some countries have, regrettably chosen to flout the WHO rules on the virus by adopting deliberate policies of stigmatization and discrimination against Nigerians simply because we were unfortunately exposed to the virus.

    “I will like to make it categorically clear that the continued discrimination and profiling of Nigeria is not acceptable to the government and people of Nigeria. Since the index case was brought to Nigeria, we have received unpleasant reports from a number of otherwise friendly countries targeting and discriminating against our nationals.”

    “Indeed, rather than institute discriminatory practices, the international community should increase assistance to countries afflicted with the deadly Ebola Virus, with practical solutions to the problems that is beginning to respect no boundary.”

     

  • Ebola: U.S isolates troops, Australia’s visa ban for affected countries

    Ebola: U.S isolates troops, Australia’s visa ban for affected countries

    The United States military has started isolating soldiers returning from an Ebola response mission in West Africa and Australia became the first rich nation to impose a visa ban on the affected countries amid global anxiety about the spread of the virus.

    The latest measures, along with decisions by some U.S states to impose mandatory quarantines on health workers returning home from treating Ebola victims in West Africa, have been condemned by health authorities and the United Nations as extreme.

    The top health official in charge of dealing with Washington’s response to Ebola warned against turning doctors and nurses who travel to West Africa to tackle Ebola into “pariahs.”

    The Ebola outbreak has killed nearly 5,000 people since March, the vast majority in West Africa, but nine Ebola cases in the U.S have caused alarm, and states such as New York and New Jersey have ignored federal advice by introducing their own strict controls.

    The U.N on Monday sharply criticized the new restrictions imposed by some U.S states on health workers returning home from the affected West African states of Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone.

    “Returning health workers are exceptional people who are giving of themselves for humanity,” Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s spokesman, Stephane Dujarric, said. “They should not be subjected to restrictions that are not based on science. Those who develop infections should be supported, not stigmatized.”

    American soldiers returning from West Africa are also being isolated, even though they showed no symptoms of infection and were not believed to have been exposed to the deadly virus, officials said on Monday.

    Meanwhile, Australia on Monday issued a blanket ban on visas from Ebola-affected countries in West Africa to prevent the disease reaching the country, becoming the first rich nation to shut its doors to the region.

    Australia has not recorded a case of Ebola despite a number of scares, and conservative Prime Minister Tony Abbott has so far resisted repeated requests to send medical personnel to help battle the outbreak on the ground.

     

  • Ebola and Citizen Adadevoh

    Ebola and Citizen Adadevoh

    On October 20, Nigeria was declared Ebola free by World Health Organisation (WHO) after 42 days without any incidence of the Ebola disease in Nigeria. The WHO representative in Nigeria Rui Gama Vaz described the victory over Ebola as “spectacular success story”. He said   “The Ebola outbreak in Nigeria has been defeated. This is a spectacular success story that shows to the world that Ebola can be contained.”

    Personally, I am so proud of Nigeria and Nigerians with the way Ebola was dealt with swiftly and decisively! This remarkable success story has renewed my hope and faith for the future of our nation. Anytime I think of Ebola and the Nigerian will, a smile comes across my face because I know that if we can contain and defeat Ebola, I know we can contain and defeat Boko Haram, corruption and all the other vices threatening to destroy Nigeria once we have the will to do so.

    Having said that, we must ask ourselves the following questions: What really helped in the early stage to ensure the Ebola virus was contained and defeated quickly? Who started the process to ensure that Nigeria did not become a graveyard full of dead bodies? What part did responsible citizenship play? Who was the Nigerian citizen that first took up responsibility once it was discovered that the Patient Zero (Patrick Sawyer the Liberian) was infected with the Ebola virus? Which Nigerian citizen exercised leadership in her area of influence that invariably helped to ensure the disease was successfully contained and defeated? Who helped to empower our leaders to lead and win the successful battle over Ebola? Who created the right conditions for our leaders at various levels to emerge as great and victorious leaders in the fight against Ebola?  These are questions we need to answer to understand how each of us as Nigerian citizens must play our role at the citizen level to create the right conditions for our leaders to play their roles at the state, ministry and federal level.

    Clayborne Carson, the editor of Dr. Martin Luther King’s autobiography said “If we want social change to take place, rather than waiting for a leader to emerge, we have to first look in the mirror and see it as our responsibility to create the conditions for a leader to emerge. When Rosa Parks was sitting on that bus and was faced with the choice of whether or not to give up her seat, she didn’t get on a cell phone and call Martin Luther King and say ‘What should I do?’ She did what she had to do, and that provided a context in which Martin Luther King could then do what he could do, and the rest is history.”

    My Nigerian version of the above quote would read – “Just like the American citizen Rosa Parks, the Nigerian citizen Dr. Ameyo Adadevoh when she was faced with the choice of bucking under pressure from the Liberian Ambassador and discharging Patient Zero Patrick Sawyer or standing her ground and quarantining him, she didn’t get on the phone to call Governor Fashola or the health minister or the President and say ‘What should I do?’ She did what she had to do as a responsible Nigerian citizen and that provided a context in which Governor Fashola of Lagos State, former Minister of Health Prof Onyebuchi Chukwu and President Jonathan could then do what they could do and as they say the rest is history – an Ebola free Nigeria!”

    If not for Citizen Adadevoh taking up the responsibility at the citizen level, we would have had a catastrophe on our hands as a nation, probably worse than what Liberia is experiencing right now due to our vast population. Even though we have a population of about 170 million Nigerians, only 19 people were infected with the Ebola virus and we lost seven. I think that is absolutely incredible considering the fact that over 4, 500 people have died from the disease in West Africa alone!

    Thomas Jefferson the third president of the United States said: “He does most in God’s great world who does his best in his own little world.” Citizen Adadevoh did her best in her own little world in the health sector of Nigeria and she ended up doing the most in God’s great world called Nigeria. One person, one Nigerian, one citizen, made an outstanding difference that invariably helped to create an Ebola-free Nigeria instead of an Ebola-ridden Nigeria.

    Historically all over the world individual citizens have taken up responsibility and exercised leadership at the citizen level. And this either created positive social change or created the right conditions for the right leaders to emerge or empowered leadership to do their part. During the debate over America’s independence, one person, one citizen, Thomas Paine wrote a pamphlet titled Common Sense that created a powerful change. General Washington said that it worked “a powerful change in the minds of many”; (These United States, 1981). Citizen Thomas Paine created the right conditions for General Washington and America’s founding fathers to exercise leadership, start the American Revolution, and declare the United States an independent nation.

    In Poland in 1980, one man, one Polish citizen, an electrician turned labour union leader Lech Walesa became a strike leader making unheard of demands of a communist-controlled government. Citizen Walesa created the conditions for the fall of communism in Poland and the rest of Eastern and Central Europe.

    In 1953, one person, one Nigerian, one citizen Anthony Enahoro moved the motion for Nigeria’s self-rule and self-determination.  Citizen Enahoro created the conditions for Nigeria’s founding fathers to play their leadership role and make it a reality.

    Governor Fashola, Prof Onyebuchi Chukwu and President Jonathan were able to exercise leadership because one Nigerian citizen Ameyo Adadevoh took up responsibility and exercised leadership at the citizen level in her area of influence – in the medical profession.

    As a Nigerian citizen, how can you take up responsibility in your area of influence like Citizen Adadevoh? How can you exercise leadership in your area of influence? How can you create the conditions that will help empower our leaders to do the right thing? What can you do to play your part in such a way that it will compel government and leadership at various levels to play their part? What do you have to do to provide the context for our leaders to do what they have to do?

    Always remember that leadership and citizenship are two sides of the same coin. The quality of leadership is always determined by the quality of citizenship at work as Citizen Adadevoh has clearly shown.

     

  • Ebola, CAF and Nigeria

    Ebola, CAF and Nigeria

    SIR: The continent of Africa presently faces a huge burden in her battle to contain the deadly Ebola Virus Disease. According to a recent WHO data, the number of people with Ebola is set to hit 10,000 in West Africa. The WHO data further reveals that 9,936 people in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, the three major countries mostly hit in what is, undoubtedly, the world’s worst Ebola epidemic, have contracted the disease. In total, 4,877 people have so far died as a result of the epidemic.

    Experts have raised alarm that the rate of infections could reach 10,000 a week by early December, if something urgent is not done to quickly take control of the disease. In Liberia, in order to stop the spread of the deadly Ebola virus, schools across the country remain closed while economic activities have come to a standstill.  Similarly, the army has been deployed to enforce all measures put in place to avert the further spread of the disease. The situation in Guinea and Serria-Leone is only marginally better. This, without a doubt, is a trying time for mother Africa.

    Part of the current Ebola burdens in Africa, is the issue of the venue for the continent’s prime soccer competition, the African Cup of Nations, AFCON, slated for January 2015. The competition, which was initially billed to be hosted by Morocco, is facing a race against time with indications that Morocco is considering pulling out as a result of the Ebola virus epidemic.

    CAF has started shopping for a country that could host the competition.   South Africa was approached by CAF as a possible replacement for Morocco, but the request was reportedly turned down on the account that it has twice played host to the championship in similar situations and that it doesn’t have the financial muscle to host it within such a short notification.

    Ghana, which was contacted after South Africa declined the offer, is demanding for more time to carefully study the Ebola situation before making its position known to CAF.

    Now, there are widespread speculations that Nigeria is considering hosting.

    It would be careless and inconsiderate for the authorities to jump at the chance of hosting the AFCON without properly putting into context the pains and anguish that the nation went through in the course of its 93 three days’ battle to contain Ebola. Considering the porous nature of our borders and other such limitations, hosting the competition, at this point in time, could make nonsense of all the gains we have made in respect of our recent travails with Ebola.

    Could we have suddenly forgotten the several complications that the Ebola invasion brought to our land while it lasted?

    If Morocco, a country that is yet to record any cases of the Ebola virus could turn down the opportunity to host the AFCON based on the fear of Ebola, it would be a suicide mission for our dear nation to do same. It would amount o spitting on the graves of our unfortunate compatriots who paid the supreme price, while battling the deadly virus in the country.

    At the moment, rather than investing on hosting the AFCON, we should pull our resources into spearheading scientific researches that could bring about the much needed cure for the Ebola virus. This is what we owe Africa. As for CAF, it should respect the position of Morocco on postponing the competition till the continent’s Ebola situation improves. This is the time to put life above every other consideration.

     

    • Tayo Ogunbiyi

    Ministry of Information & Strategy,

    Alausa, Ikeja.

  • Ebola death toll ‘tops 4,900’

    Ebola death toll ‘tops 4,900’

    The death toll from the Ebola epidemic rose to 4,922 out of 10,141 known cases in eight countries through October 23, the World Health Organization has said.

    The virus, which reached Mali through a two-year-old girl who died on Friday, now threatens Ivory Coast, having infected people virtually all along its borders with Guinea and Liberia.

    Ivory Coast is the world’s biggest cocoa producer. The Ebola outbreak has hurt the economic growth that has been raising living standards in the region, Reuters reports.

    The three worst-hit countries of West Africa – Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone – account for the bulk of the world’s worst Ebola outbreak, recording 4,912 deaths out of 10,114 cases, the WHO said in its update.

    The overall figures include outbreaks in Nigeria and Senegal, deemed by the WHO to be now over, as well as isolated cases in Spain, the United States and a single case in Mali.

    But the true toll may be three times as much: by a factor of 1.5 in Guinea, 2 in Sierra Leone and 2.5 in Liberia, while the death rate is thought to be about 70 percent of all cases.

    The WHO has said that many families are keeping infected people at home rather than putting them into isolation in treatment centres, some of which have refused patients due to a lack of beds and basic supplies.

  • Ebola: of pestilence, pretense and poverty

    Ebola: of pestilence, pretense and poverty

    Fear calls forth genius and folly but never in equal measure; the greater the fear, the greater the folly.

    In the presence of Ebola or anything that threatens indiscriminate probable death, fear becomes rational. It certainly is an inevitable, natural response. Fear can be a strong call, piercing the miasma of false comfort and numbed inaction. Many a brave deed and innovative enterprise have been predicated on the cold slap of fear. Hysteria is of a different sort. It paralyzes logic, turning into madmen those who act out its passions. That the madness may be temporary does not require the damage wrought to be equally limited. History is littered with the flotsam that hysteria’s ugly hand has caused.  Hysteria also is rarely a natural phenomenon. It is artificially induced, taking the kernel of fear and sowing it into a harvest of irrational dread. Generally, those who bestir public hysteria have ulterior motives beyond insulating themselves or others from the feared danger. They incite fear until it compounds exponentially, transforming itself into an acrid poultice of mistake, hatred, blame, illogic, prejudice and horrid superstition. With this in mind, we should weight the global response to the Ebola epidemic.

    International reportage of Ebola should finally disabuse those of us who still adhere to the illusion that the major global media houses are committed to objective journalism. These media outlets have stoked hysteria and foreboding like an arsonist does fire.  Their job has not been to objectively report the risks at hand and the progress made. Their mission was to strike fear so the public would say glued to their televisions. They did not set out to properly educate their viewers about Ebola. They sought to portray Ebola as marauding dread that would mesmerize the audience as much as their favorite action drama or reality show. They turned the nightly news into a horror flick or a sports contest where we were daily told the scores of infected and dead Ebola had netted. The casualties were no longer people but numerical symbols of the deadly victory Ebola was said to be winning.

    The more lethal and contagious Ebola was perceived, the more the newsmakers could continue making news and keeping people fixed to their television channels. The media is no longer about journalism. It is a big and global business. Thus, like any business, the objective is profits which are achieved through the paid advertisements high viewer ratings induce. If the truth serves to profit the corporate bottom line, then the truth they will present. But rarely does the truth suffice. Thus, they simplify then inflate it; they distort into something the truth would not recognize but something the corporate sponsors see as befitting their investments. Journalism is no longer the pursuit; it is the vehicle by which profits are pursued with a bill collector’s vigor.

    Yet, hysteria may arrive quickly but it never leaves without exacting a dear cost. The news of four Ebola cases sent the United States into near panic. The unfortunate Liberian who entered America with Ebola became the victim of umbrage and disgust. Xenophobia and racism were perceptible undercurrents. Not spoken in polite circles yet understood by all was the theme that nothing good comes out of Africa except sickness, war and death. On the lips of many Americans was the question: “Why let these people into our nation to destroy it?” The fear of dreaded disease merged with the historic hatred of black skin to produce an uncivil response to what was entirely a human tragedy. The people of Black Africa were all seen as accursed by reason of their origins and not as unfortunate victims by reason of the incidences of history over which they have exercised little control.

    At the same time Ebola came, American was experiencing an outbreak of enterovirus d68. The virus had affected people in almost all fifty states. At least, five deaths were confirmed due to the sickness which seems to spread faster geographically than Ebola but is less fatal. News concerning d68 was minimal compared to Ebola although the number of deaths exceeded the total number of Ebola cases reported in the nation. Part of the reason for the discrepant attention was the steep lethality and dire symptoms of Ebola. This is understandable. It is fear at its most natural. But there is another more sinister factor at work. D68 was not as newsworthy because there was no outsider to blame. D68 was an American phenomenon and thus had to be tolerated with resolve and a stiff upper lip.

    With only four cases in a population over 300 million, Ebola is limited to one person in every seventy-five million people. The likelihood of an American contracting Ebola was a fraction of that of being shot by a crazed gunman. However, Americans are more petrified of stricter gun control than of the maniacal gun-toters who on a weekly basis bring carnage to some school or shopping center. But there is no great outcry, no hysteria. There is only resignation to the fact that indiscriminant commerce in guns is woven into American life. Thus, cold-blooded, insane murder will also be part of the national fabric. However, Africans and their dreaded disease should not be. Thus, much of the fury and anger Americans should aim at correcting their own internal contradictions was hurled at the Liberian Duncan.

    One can argue the morality of Duncan traveling to America given that he was cognizant of his exposure to the disease. Surely, it would it have been nobly self-sacrificing to have remained in Liberia. Yet, I dare not condemn the man for no one truly knows how he would respond if placed in similar circumstance. The best response is not condemnation but human understanding and empathy.  That did not occur.

    Duncan was begrudgingly admitted into the treating hospital. The treatment the uninsured black man received does not seem to have been inspired. At most, the hospital tried to manage his disease and not help him overcome it. To say the treatment received was minimalist would not be off-the-mark. This again exposes the intrusion of racism into every facet of American life even the administration of health care, which in some instances can be a decision of life or death for a fellow human being. It also reveals the moral emptiness of a health care system run as a business for profit instead of one that functions as a public service. In a profit-based system either you pay money or you pay with something dearer – your health or your life.

    There is the gnawing sense that Duncan’s treatment was kept to the lowest minimum because those in charge were unconcerned whether Duncan lived or died. There was an unspoken yet strong disincentive to curing the man. They feared his cure would flash a green light to other Liberians to take the same route to better treatment. His death would constitute a red stop light. The trajectory of human affairs is forever distorted by the twist of irony. Three hundred years ago, Whites were removing the likes of Duncan from his homeland against their will. This time, he wanted to come; this time, they no longer wanted him. Justice eventually comes but it does not arrive quickly enough to come for us all.

    Waiting for Mr. Duncan to get out of the hospital was the Dallas County Prosecutor’s office. They wanted to bring criminal charges against him although his actions fit no known criminal offense. Trying to ingratiate themselves to American authorities, Liberian officials also announced they wanted Duncan deported that he may face criminal charges back home. Faced with a ravaging epidemic laying down hundreds of people daily, Liberia had not the ability to manage the crisis at hand let alone divert inordinate attention to the lone man who got away. Neither the Texan or Liberian prosecutors would have their catch. Duncan never emerged from his hospital bed alive.

    The two nurses who contracted the illness from Duncan have survived the worst. They shall recover. The New York City doctor contracted it while treating patients in Guinea. He is in isolation and will receive the finest care. Yet, his case sustains the hysteria. Across the nation hospitals have been visited by people who had not the slightest chance of possible contact with anyone who might have had contact with anyone exposed to the virus. People were rushing to the hospital because they were sweating after being outside or felt a pain in their stomach after eating too much. All the while, as they irrationally feared Ebola, they also irrationally cursed Africa and Africans.

    Some of the invectives against Africa attached to President Obama. Racists opined he had not acted decisively because Ebola was an African disease and he wanted sick Africans to come and spread it on America. Thus, Obama refused to institute a travel ban on West Africa. The accusation is the height of animus. It is as senseless as it is vulgar. Yet, hatred has informed much of what has happened. Conservative Republican political leaders seized the opportunity to inflict additional political injury on Obama and other Democrats in the days before the important congressional elections in early November. Giving a nod and wink to the racists, they pronounced Obama’s handling of “the crisis” as casual and inattentive.  They too blamed Obama for opposing a travel ban, failing to add President Obama was merely following the advice of the overwhelming majority of medical experts.

    Last week, the president appointed an Ebola Czar, Ron Klain, to counteract the perception that his administration had lost control of this and other challenges. A consummate political insider, Klain has been Chief of Staff to the last two Democratic Vice Presidents (Gore and Biden). Klain’s medical background is that of a layman. He has no greater knowledge of infectious diseases that you or I. Clearly, he can add nothing of medical value. His mission is to halt the political hemorrhaging inflicted on the Obama administration by the withering Republican criticism.

    Even the American military has got into the act. Not only has the President deployed several thousand troops to Liberia to help construct field hospitals and train local workers on basic medical procedures regarding the care of Ebola patients, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Martin Dempsey proclaimed Ebola to be a national security threat. If possible, he would recommend bombing the smithereens out of the virus. He would meet even less fortune in this endeavor as he is currently having in the air war against an advancing ISIS in Syria and Iraq.

    The military has even established an Ebola rapid response force to deploy within America. This is lunacy. Once the soldiers get to the troubled person, what in creation will they do? The military’s incursion in domestic concerns far flung from its core mission, is troubling. Government funds for medical care and even the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) which is the lead agency on Ebola have withered. The military is so flush with money and power that it can freely invade the province of specialized civilian agencies although the military is ill-equipped to make anything good come out of the encroachment. This is another signal of the slow erosion of American democracy. The greater the military’s role in domestic affairs, the lesser becomes a nation’s democracy. Wherever the military enters, democracy leaves.

    Strangely, the tradecraft of the military does have an answer to the mystery of Ebola. This goes not to the cure but the dissemination of the virus. Those nations that have suffered sustained outbreaks have one thing in common. They are nations laid bare by protracted civil war that have destroyed their national institutions included whatever rudimentary health care that might have existed. Before the current outbreak, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Sudan hosted the most severe outbreaks. Both those nations are sites of perennial war. Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea have also been victimized by ruthless war and unrest. The recovery they face will take several generations. Broken and impoverished by war, these nations became susceptible in a special way to Ebola’s contagion. War is often the first link in a chain of calamity. Where there is long war, pestilence shall follow.

    This is not the first instance of disease riding the hind of war. As WWI was coming to a close in 1918, the Spanish Flu descended. It killed roughly 50 million people or over three percent of the global population in a matter of months. The disease was more deadly than the war. That the most deadly modern plague came on the heels of the first modern war is not coincidence. The conditions of war – trenches, chemical weapons, compact quartering of troops and civilians – as well as the social and material depravations inherent in warfare coupled to make this disease as deadly as disease can get. If a disease as fatal as the 1918 flu now laid siege, it would claim roughly 250 million people. This is equivalent to eliminating almost all of West Africa or five of every six Americans.

    The dysfunction and disease that follow war are often more fatal than the fighting itself. That Nigeria has sufficiently intact medical institutions and that health care professionals and leaders on the ground had the will and courage to respond were the reasons the disease did not spread in Nigeria. Had the nation been then the throes of a complete unrest, the story would have different. Ebola would have marched the ravager’s march through the land. The lessons of war and now of Ebola are ample ones to make all of us rededicate ourselves to peace and stability in Nigeria and throughout the region.

    The other aspect of the disease that has gone unreported is that the virus not only attacks poor, scarred nations but the most vulnerable of the people in these countries. Aside from infecting health care workers, few members of the middle or upper classes have been infected. The vast majority are the poor underclass who eat sparingly and whatever they can, including spoiled, diseased meat caught or paid for on the cheap. Water is even a luxury. Had they or their medical system the ability to rehydrate people on an ongoing basis, the mortality rate of the disease would lower significantly.

    In the end, Ebola is a virus, a serious and deadly one. We can do nothing about its existence. The jeopardy of premature death is part of life. Yet, mankind can do much better in how we respond to this and other scourges. For in the quality of our response, we find our humanity or lose it. Whether we treat the afflicted and whether we act to mitigate the socio-economic imbalances that turn a disease into an epidemic have nothing to do with the severity of the illness. They have everything to do with the largeness of heart and love of mankind we care to live by so that others may not perish before their time.

     

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