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Sunday, 16 November 2014
World leaders unite vows to eradicate Ebola from the world
The world's most powerful economies
vowed on Saturday to "extinguish" the Ebola
epidemic ravaging west Africa, as the vast desert
nation of Mali scrambled to prevent a new
outbreak of the killer disease.
Despite some hopeful signs from Africa - where
Liberia has lifted its state of emergency and the
Democratic Republic of Congo announced the end
of its own, unrelated, outbreak of Ebola - the
recent deaths of three people in Mali have fuelled
fears of a new hotspot.
As pop stars recorded a new "Band Aid" single in
London to help combat a disease that has killed
more than 5 100 people in Guinea, Liberia and
Sierra Leone, global leaders meeting in Brisbane
made no new pledges of cash.
"G20 members are committed to do what is
necessary to ensure the international effort can
extinguish the outbreak and address its medium-
term economic and humanitarian costs," the
leaders said in a statement, as they welcomed the
International Monetary Fund's initiative to release
$300m to combat Ebola.
They also promised to share best practices on
protecting health workers on the frontline, as a
Sierra Leone doctor with US residency was flown
to be treated at the Nebraska Medical Center in
Omaha.
Described as "critically ill", Martin Salia will be
the third Ebola patient treated at the facility. Both
others survived.
"We immediately started preparing the unit and
notifying staff members of this possibility," said
Phil Smith, medical director of the bio-
containment unit.
"We've obviously been through this a couple of
times before, so we know what to expect."
Mali situation worrying
The G20 pledge came as Togo, which is
coordinating the west African fight, warned that
the world "cannot relax efforts" despite some
encouraging signals on the ground.
Senegal said on Friday it was reopening its air
and sea borders with Guinea, Liberia and Sierra
Leone, although its land border with Guinea will
remain closed. The news came a day after Liberia
lifted its state of emergency, announcing huge
gains in fighting Ebola.
The Democratic Republic of Congo - where a
three-month outbreak of a different strain of the
disease claimed at least 49 lives since August -
declared itself Ebola-free on Saturday.
But attention has now turned to Mali where there
are fears that an isolated outbreak could spark a
major crisis after the deaths from Ebola of three
people infected by a Guinean imam who died of
the disease.
A fourth person, a doctor at the Bamako clinic
where the cleric died, is in intensive care with
Ebola. More than 250 people have been placed
under observation.
Former colonial power France added Bamako to
its list of destinations subject to Ebola flight
checks, and its development minister, Annick
Girardin, was to make an unscheduled visit to
Mali on Saturday.
"The situation in Mali is worrying," she told AFP
in the Guinean capital Conakry, saying she would
"meet the Malian authorities to see how we can
scale things up."
There is no known cure for Ebola, one of the
deadliest known pathogens which spreads
through contact with bodily fluids, but trials for
several possible treatments were announced this
week in west Africa and Canada.
The World Health Organisation said on Friday that
5 177 people are known to have died of Ebola
across eight countries, out of a total 14,413 cases
of infection, since December 2013.
Makes humans 'untouchable'
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon urged "G20
countries to step up", warning that Ebola's
disrupting effect on farming could potentially
spark a food crisis for a million people.
"As rates decline in one area, they are rising in
others. Transmission continues to outpace the
response from the international community," Ban
told reporters.
A joint petition from aid groups including Oxfam
and Save the Children urged the G20 to band
together to ensure that the right resources are
made available in terms of staff, equipment and
funding.
Artists including One Direction, U2 frontman Bono,
Coldplay's Chris Martin and Sinead O'Connor
were set to record late into the night for a 30th
anniversary version of the charity single Do They
Know It's Christmas? .
"It's not just about what's happening in west
Africa, it could happen here tomorrow," said
rocker-turned-activist Bob Geldof, one of the
forces behind the original Band Aid.
"We can stop this thing, we can allow mothers no
matter where they are to be able to touch their
dying children."
Making his way into the studio, Bono hit out at
the response of rich countries, saying if they "kept
the promises they make at these big G8 meetings
and the like we wouldn't have to be standing
here".
Set to air on Sunday before its official release
Monday, the single will be the fourth incarnation
of the song, which became one of the biggest-
selling singles ever after its release in 1984 to
raise funds for Ethiopian famine relief.
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