Ebola is a worse threat to the world than ISIS [View all]
and the world hasn't done nearly enough- kudos to President Obama on addressing this threat vigorously. And no, I'm not talking about ebola coming to the U.S. The threat is to African countries like Sierra Leone and Liberia. Is it worse than has officially been reported? Almost certainly.
In what appeared to be an acknowledgment that official statistics had so far been misleading, the government said the countrys plight was worse than what was being reflected in reports, adding that there was a desperate need to step up our response.
A Western diplomat here called Mr. Koromas newest restrictive order, coming after a three-day national lockdown that required every citizen to stay inside, a mitigating measure reacting to a worsening situation. The diplomat added, The numbers are not getting better.
The government set up official corridors for traveling through quarantined areas, and movement through them is now restricted to the hours between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Passengers were told not to leave their vehicles while passing through quarantined zones. And in individual infected chiefdoms traditional administrative units within the newly quarantined districts, Mr. Koroma took the extraordinary step of warning citizens not to travel to any other chiefdom until further notice.
The World Health Organization, echoing the governments increasingly worried tone, said Thursday that the situation in Sierra Leone continues to deteriorate, noting a sharp increase in new Ebola cases in Freetown, rising to more than 80 for the week ending Sept. 21.
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http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/26/world/africa/ebola-epidemic-sierra-leone-quarantine.html?_r=0
President Barack Obama criticized the international response to the Ebola epidemic in West Africa as falling short of what is needed to combat a crisis "spreading at alarming speed."
Mr. Obama, in remarks during a high-level United Nations meeting on the outbreak, said the disease could kill hundreds of thousands of people if global institutions and individual nations don't quickly commit more resources to fighting the epidemic.
"It isn't enough," Mr. Obama said of the response so far. "There's still a significant gap between where we are and where we need to be."
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http://online.wsj.com/articles/world-falling-short-in-response-to-ebola-obama-says-1411659980