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In an effort to control the Ebola outbreak that medical experts say is raging “virtually unchecked” in the nation’s capital, Liberia has quarantined remote villages in the northeast, setting up medical roadblocks, deploying military forces to keep infected people from leaving their homes, and effectively shutting off some communities from the outside world.
“With few food and medical supplies getting in, many abandoned villagers face a stark choice: stay where they are and risk death or skip quarantine, spreading the infection further in a country ill-equipped to cope,” Eric Telmor and Emma Farge write for Reuters.
The UN’s World Food Programme (WFP) has scaled up its operations, delivering food to tens of thousands of affected people in Liberia, Guinea, and Sierra Leone. In a statement announcing its intent to supply 24,000 Liberian people affected by Ebola with full rations for 90 days, the WFP explained:
WFP’s food assistance to hospitalized victims in isolation centers ensures that the victims receive the necessary nutrients for their bodies to fight the virus. WFP’s food assistance also ensures that while under quarantine, people have enough to eat and do not have to leave their homes to purchase food. WFP assistance thus helps to stabilize affected communities by limiting unnecessary movement and enabling people to cope with lost livelihoods.
Still, with almost 300,000 people living just in Lofa — one of the counties under quarantine, which has recorded more new cases of Ebola than anywhere else — this assistance will surely not go far enough.
Meanwhile, the situation in Liberia’s capital of Monrovia was described Friday as “catastrophic” and “deteriorating daily” — and that was before Saturday’s overnight raid by armed men on a quarantine center, during which about 30 patients absconded, raising fears about potential contamination within the tightly packed neighborhood of West Point. As of Monday afternoon, 20 of those patients had returned, and 17 were still missing.
BuzzFeed reported from the scene:
A mob descended on the center at around 5:30 p.m., chanting, “No Ebola in West Point! No Ebola in West Point!” They stormed the front gate and pushed into the holding center. They stole the few gloves someone had donated this morning, and the chlorine sprayers used to disinfect the bodies of those who die here, all the while hollering that Ebola is a hoax.
They ransacked the protective suits, the goggles, the masks.