Ebola: Ban to convene high-level meeting at UN headquarters to scale-up crisis response
The UN World Health Organization (WHO), meanwhile, on Tuesday said the number of cases topped 4,200, and reported that thousands of new cases are expected in Liberia over the coming three weeks.
“Conventional Ebola control interventions are not having an adequate impact in Liberia,” WHO said in an update on Liberia issued Monday, “though they appear to be working elsewhere in areas of limited transmission, most notably in Nigeria, Senegal, and the Democratic Republic of Congo.”
In a new update issued on Tuesday, WHO said that as of 6 September, 4,269 cases and 2,288 deaths have been reported in the current outbreak of Ebola virus disease in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone. In Nigeria, there have been 21 cases and 8 deaths. In Senegal, one case has been confirmed.
Meanwhile, at UN Headquarters, the Secretary-General’s Special Representative for Liberia, Karin Landgren, briefed the Security Council on Tuesday, warning that the Ebola crisis has become complex, with political, security, economic and social implications that will continue to affect the country well beyond the current medical emergency.
Landgren added that Liberians are now facing the gravest threat since the war – one that would challenge any Government or society.
Under-Secretary-General for UN Peacekeeping Operations, Hervé Ladsous, is scheduled to travel to Liberia from the 11th to 12th of September. During his visit, he is expected to hold meetings with national authorities and UN mission (UNMIL) personnel to discuss how the UN Peacekeeping efforts can further support the fight against Ebola in Liberia.
The Secretary-General spoke on Monday with the United States President Barack Obama and discussed the need to urgently scale up international efforts to combat the Ebola outbreak in West Africa, UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said.
The spokesperson also announced that the UN chief has requested that Ameerah Haq, Under-Secretary-General for Field Support, postpone her departure from the United Nations, given the severity of the crisis and that she has graciously agreed.
Ban, who has been making a series of calls to key countries and organizations to urge more support for countries affected by the disease, informed President Obama that he is planning to convene a high-level event during the General Assembly to highlight the needs and required response from Governments, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), the private sector and academic institutions.
In addition, the UN chief appointed Assistant Secretary-General for Field Support Anthony Banbury as UN Deputy Ebola Coordinator and Operation Crisis Manager, working out of the United Nations Operations Crisis Centre. Banbury will coordinate the operational work of the UN System, Member States, NGOs and other stakeholders under a single platform.
He will work closely with David Nabarro, Senior UN System Coordinator for Ebola and WHO Director-General Margaret Chan and her team in managing the overall response to the Ebola crisis.
In Geneva, Sylvie Briand, WHO Director of the Department of Pandemic and Epidemic Diseases, in response to a question about risks associated with the Muslim hajj to Saudi Arabia where two million people were expected, said that Saudi Arabia had stopped issuing visas to affected countries and exit screenings were in place in the affected countries.
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