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Saturday, 11 October 2014
Ebola death toll crosses 4,000 mark
Latest figure put at 4,033 as UN special envoy calls
for greater resources and effort to battle
epidemic in West Africa.
More than 4,000 people have died in the Ebola
epidemic that broke out in West Africa at the start
of the year, according to the latest figures
released by the World Health Organisation.
The WHO said on Friday that as of October 8,
4,033 people have died of Ebola out of a total of
8,399 registered cases in seven countries. The last
toll put the figures at 3,865 dead from 8,033
cases.
The seven affected countries are split into two
groups by WHO.
The first includes Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone
- by far the worst-affected countries.
The second group consists of Nigeria, Senegal,
Spain and US, which have seen a small number of
highly isolated cases.
Liberia is the worst-hit of all, with 4,076 cases and
2,316 deaths, followed by Sierra Leone with 2,950
cases and 930 deaths. Guinea, where the
epidemic originated in December, has seen 1,350
cases and 778 deaths.
Health workers continue to pay a heavy price for
their efforts, with 233 deaths out of 416 cases
across the countries.
Nigeria has now been declared Ebola-free and its
toll remains unchanged at eight dead from 20
cases.
There has been one death in the US and one case
contracted in Spain.
The toll remains unchanged in Senegal with one
case. In the Democratic Republic of Congo, hit by
a separate strain of Ebola from the one raging in
West Africa, WHO says there have been 71 cases
and 43 deaths up to October 7.
The UN special envoy on Ebola said on Friday that
the number of cases was probably doubling every
three-to-four weeks and the response needed to
be 20 times greater than it was at the beginning of
October.
David Nabarro told the UN General Assembly that
without the mass mobilisation of the world to
support the affected countries in West Africa, "it
will be impossible to get this disease quickly
under control, and the world will have to live with
the Ebola virus forever".
Separately, Jan Eliasson, UN deputy secretary-
general, said catching up with "the menacing
exponential curve of the virus" demands a
massive increase in financial resources, medical
staff and equipment.
"I now appeal to all member states to act
generously and swiftly," he said.
"Speed is of the essence. A contribution within
days is more important than a larger contribution
within weeks," Eliasson said.
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