*Worked in Sierra-Leone, Guinea, took ill at MMA, Lagos
*Beware of fake test kits, sanitizers — FG
*OAU bars foreign students from returning for semester
LAGOS—A South African, suspected of showing symptoms of Ebola Virus Disease,
EVD, as she arrived Murtala Muhammed Airport, Lagos yesterday, has been
quarantined at the isolation ward in Lagos.
The female passenger, Folswe Elizabeth Maria, on board Royal Air Maroc, from
Morocco was on transit and was said to have taken ill at the transit area of
the airport after using the toilet. The case was immediately reported to
officials of the Port Health Services who used the Infra-red Thermometre to
test her and discovered that she had high temperature. The passenger was later
taken to an isolation centre and kept under observation by Port Health
officials.
It was further gathered that the woman had worked previously in two Ebola
Virus Disease-prone countries of Guinea and Sierra Leone, thus fuelling
suspicion that she could have contracted the disease.
The sources said: “The passenger, who is from South Africa, came aboard
Royal Air Maroc. She followed normal processes even at the Nigeria Immigration
Service. She is a transit passenger and she was at the transit lounge where she
went to drink and thereafter felt uneasy; went to the toilet and on coming
back, she fell ill. The case was reported to the Port Health Service officials
who immediately examined her.”
A statement signed by the Special Assistant on Media and Communications to
the Minister of Health, Dan Nwomeh said: “The South African national suspected
of showing symptoms of Ebola at the international airport (Murtala Muhammed
International Airport, Lagos) was quarantined at the isolation ward in Lagos
while her case is being investigated”.
NAFDAC warns against fake test kits
Meanwhile, the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control,
NAFDAC, has warned Nigerians not to fall prey to fake test kits for Ebola
disease. Director-General of NAFDAC, Dr. Paul Orhii, who raised alarm over
circulation of the fake test kits and sanitizers in the market, cautioned
Nigerians to be careful.
Orhii gave the warning while briefing the media on his return, yesterday,
from an emergency meeting summoned by World Health Organisation, WHO, for
health authorities of member nations in Geneva to find lasting solution to
Ebola virus and some vaccines clinically being evaluated with very high
prospect of combating the disease.
He said: “Nigerians must be vigilant because some unscrupulous elements have
started exploiting the Ebola virus scare to market counterfeit test kits and
sanitary products.”
Orhii, however, expressed optimism that there was a great promise that some
drugs and vaccines could be found soon to contain the virus.
“We have some Nigerian remedies that we are looking at very closely and
after investigation, we hope that they will be able to help check the Ebola
virus. So Nigerians do not need to panic,” he said.
He reiterated that Ebola virus was not a death sentence in Nigeria as,
according to him, the Federal Government, through the efforts of the Federal
Ministry of Health, had managed the situation effectively and halted the
rampaging spread of the disease.
“Nigerians are full of commendation and appreciation to President Good luck
Jonathan and the Minister of Health, Onyebuchi Chukwu, for effectively
containing the Ebola virus through prompt deployment of adequate funds,
material resources and personnel to strategic places,” he said.
The NAFDAC boss further noted that Nigerians were proud of the current
efforts of government, saying many countries were learning from the methods and
strategies adopted by Nigeria to combat the Ebola menace.
He, therefore, appealed to Nigerians in Diaspora to feel free to visit home
as the threat of the deadly disease had been effectively contained by the
government.
OAU bars foreign students from returning for current semester
Management of Obafemi Awolowo University, OAU, yesterday, barred foreign
students of the institution from returning for the current semester to prevent
the spread of the Ebola Virus Disease, EVD, to the university. This came as the
institution said no student would be allowed into the university’s campus until
after proper screening.
The management took the decision following the report that a female student
of the university showed symptoms of EVD.
At a briefing on the update of the EVD case, Vice Chancellor of OAU,
Professor Bamitale Omole, said: “Foreign students of OAU have been asked to
stay back for the session; those around who have not gone out of the country
have been screened. As of now the reported lady is Ebola free.”
Meanwhile, Governor Rauf Aregbesola of Osun State, has stressed the health
and security challenges posed to any country by the EVD scourge.
The governor, who, convened a state Security Council and stakeholders
meeting on prevention of EVD, insisted that any country under the scourge
risked losing its sovereignty.
He said: “We should not see the disease as an ordinary health challenge but
a situation that can be seen as a security problem for a state or a nation.
That is why I have called all the security chiefs and all stakeholders to this
meeting. I am happy that we now have a big relief in the state against the
rumour of the virus in the state. God forbid it, I have been troubled since the
news broke out.
How could we have coped with the little resources of the state? You should
now go out to tell the world that there is no Ebola in Osun and that we will
prevent its manifestation here at all cost.
“With all these countries around us, such as Liberia, Sierra-Leone, Guinea
and Congo, we need to support them because they are too close for the comfort
of our country, ” Aregbesola said.
Source: Vanguard
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