Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,150,590 members, 7,809,137 topics. Date: Friday, 26 April 2024 at 12:56 AM

West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola - Health - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Health / West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola (14480 Views)

LASTMA Attack: Female Tricycle Operator Battles For Life (Photo) / Ebola: West-African Nations Approach Lagos For Help. / Ebola Cripples West African Economies As Fearful Workers Stay Home (2) (3) (4)

(1) (2) (3) (Reply) (Go Down)

West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by anonymous6(f): 11:21pm On Sep 17, 2014
[b]ABIDJAN (Reuters) - The billboard depicts a masked health worker in a biohazard suit looming over a bed-ridden patient. Above them, bright red letters warn commuters on a busy Abidjan street that "The Ebola risk is always there".

As Ivory Coast campaigns to fend off an Ebola outbreak ravaging neighboring West African states, such grim reminders of the catastrophe unfolding across its western border are everywhere.

The worst recorded outbreak of the virus has killed over 2,400 people in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea, wreaking havoc on their fragile economies, and has also spread to Nigeria and Senegal.

If it reaches Ivory Coast, the powerhouse of French-speaking West Africa, the economic consequences could be yet worse. The country of 20 million people

exports 40 percent of the world's cocoa, the raw material for chocolate, and supplies its landlocked neighbors with everything from rice to fuel.

Ivory Coast is taking the kind of aggressive anti-infection measures that its poorer, smaller western neighbors were slow to adopt. Hand washing stations have appeared at the entrances of government buildings and office towers in Abidjan, the bustling economic capital. People have abandoned the traditional three-kiss greeting.

Mass mobile text messages send out a government awareness campaign nationwide. And children, exposed to the information drive on radio and television, quarantine their classmates in a playground game they call "Ebola".

"It's without precedent," said Daouda Coulibaly, the epidemiologist charged with leading the effort. "We started back in March to explain to people that this is a real disease. It must be taken seriously."

The World Health Organization (WHO) has already warned that several neighboring countries are at risk. With the outbreak gathering pace, the WHO has said a $1 billion international response will be needed to keep the number of those infected within the "tens of thousands".

Coulibaly is working seven days a week to ensure that none of them is Ivorian, and the government has imposed draconian measures at its borders. Flights to and from Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia have been banned - provoking anger in those countries - and last month the western border was shut.

Dozens of people have been tested for the disease. The army is now patrolling the area and those caught crossing into Ivory Coast illicitly face an automatic 21-day quarantine.

A man hunting bush rats in violation of a government ban on bush meat, thought to be one way in which Ebola is transmitted, was condemned to five years in prison last month.

But experts warn that Ivory Coast may struggle to insulate itself completely due to its long, porous borders with both Guinea and Liberia - the country worst hit by the disease.

"The epidemic, particularly in Sierra Leone and Liberia, is outpacing our attempts to control it," said Marc Poncin, head of emergency response for medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres in Guinea. "Ivory Coast is the country most at risk. It's probably a question of time before it appears in Ivory Coast."

RENAISSANCE AT RISK

Little over three years after a civil war, the Ivorian economy is bouncing back. Growth hit 9.8 percent last year and investors' interest is booming.

A $750 million Eurobond issued in July attracted $4.75 billion worth of orders, and the government has said it will tap international debt markets again next year.

President Alassane Ouattara, who emerged victorious from the 2011 conflict largely thanks to military backing from France, is up for reelection next year. He is campaigning as the architect of an Ivorian renaissance but Ebola could jeopardize that.

"We're worried by Ebola in neighboring countries that are our economic and commercial partners," Ouattara said on Wednesday, in his first direct comments on the outbreak. "We're working to ensure that we maintain our strong rate of growth."

For Ronak Gopaldas, head of country risk analysis at South Africa's Rand Merchant Bank, the government knows its record is on the line: "Ebola risks puncturing all the good work that's been done and I think that's why they've been so proactive."

While economists assess Ebola's impact, it is clear that an economic calamity is brewing across Ivory Coast's borders. Economic growth in Liberia and Sierra Leone could drop by almost 3.5 percentage points, according to the International Monetary Fund, as Ebola cripples agriculture and services.

Prices there have rocketed as worried citizens rush to stock up on provisions and border closures disrupt imports.

Ivory Coast would face the same problems were Ebola to jump the border. But, with an economy that makes up 40 percent of the eight-nation CFA franc bloc, the repercussions would be regional, including higher inflation.

"We're already affected economically speaking because of the perception," Trade Minister Jean-Louis Billon told Reuters. "Those who are frightened are more those who know less about Africa and are coming to discover."

Though the country has yet to register a single case, at least two international conferences due to take place in Ivory Coast have been canceled. International cocoa exporters have restricted staff movements in the country, exposing the sector's vulnerability to the growing fear of Ebola.

"The more you go to the perception that things are getting out of control, the more you will have this psychological effect," said Alain Feler, IMF representative in Ivory Coast.

Citizens of Abidjan are wary. On packed public buses, people try to avoid touching. "It's often difficult because you can't avoid human contact," said student Cesar Kouame Kouakou. "But we try to do it because no-one knows what causes this sickness."

Ivorian authorities are heartened by events in Senegal and Nigeria, where relatively rapid government responses appear to have contained outbreaks.

After an initially slow start, hundreds of millions of dollars in international financial assistance are also beginning to pour into Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone to fund the Ebola fight and offset the economic damage.

President Barack Obama has announced that the United States plans to send 3,000 troops to the region.

For Coulibaly, the growing momentum is a positive step, but he worries that nations on the frontline are still being neglected. "The neighboring countries must be assisted financially, logistically, with material resources," he said. "We need to see that assistance now." [/b]
http://news.yahoo.com/west-african-powerhouse-ivory-coast-battles-keep-ebola-164129306--business.html
Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by kolomax(m): 6:44am On Sep 18, 2014
Ok
Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by otijah(m): 6:44am On Sep 18, 2014
I think the best they can do themselve is to seek advice and strategies from other powerful nations e.g Nigeria

31 Likes

Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by merit12(f): 6:44am On Sep 18, 2014
.mm
Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by Moblord(m): 6:44am On Sep 18, 2014
Good work.. Now P.H.E teachers are suppose to include Ebola when teaching the topic disease

3 Likes

Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by sosodevf(m): 6:44am On Sep 18, 2014
cool
Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by eleojo23: 6:44am On Sep 18, 2014
The Ivorians should take these preventive measures seriously. Sometimes you don't have to see or experience to believe. It's common sense.

2 Likes

Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by chibwike(m): 6:44am On Sep 18, 2014
Thank you lord, for yet another day.

1 Like

Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by Kayraph(m): 6:44am On Sep 18, 2014
Take it or leave it, Nigeria still remains the giant of Africa.

Our handling of the EVD issue is quite commendable because other countries in Africa would surely find it hard to contain the virus like we have done.

Long live FRN!

41 Likes

Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by sammieguze(m): 6:45am On Sep 18, 2014
Prevention......
Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by wellmax(m): 6:45am On Sep 18, 2014
Wishing them well
Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by bist: 6:45am On Sep 18, 2014
Noted!!!
Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by priscaoge(f): 6:46am On Sep 18, 2014
2,400 peopleshockedshocked? Jezzzz

[b]
After an initially slow start, hundreds of millions of dollars in international financial assistance are also beginning to pour into Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone to fund the Ebola fight and offset the economic damage.

President Barack Obama has announced that the United States plans to send 3,000 troops to the region.


What did Obama send to Nigeria to help fight Ebola?undecidedundecided

God bless GEJ and Fashola/Lagos State Govt for their wonderful effort towards fighting this deadly disease!.

10 Likes

Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by youngvizzy1(m): 6:46am On Sep 18, 2014
grin all mallam wit he kettle grin

1 Like

Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by searay(m): 6:47am On Sep 18, 2014
Has they been any case of Ebola in Ivory Coast?
Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by devigblegble: 6:47am On Sep 18, 2014
Chai these people don't sleep ba
Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by Jossey2(m): 6:47am On Sep 18, 2014
The artcle too much to read.

1 Like

Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by chibwike(m): 6:48am On Sep 18, 2014
anonymous6: [b]ABIDJAN (Reuters) - The billboard depicts a masked health worker in a biohazard suit looming over a bed-ridden patient. Above them, bright red letters warn commuters on a busy Abidjan street that "The Ebola risk is always there".
As Ivory Coast campaigns to fend off an Ebola outbreak ravaging neighboring West African states, such grim reminders of the catastrophe unfolding across its western border are everywhere.
The worst recorded outbreak of the virus has killed over 2,400 people in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea, wreaking havoc on their fragile economies, and has also spread to Nigeria and Senegal.
If it reaches Ivory Coast, the powerhouse of French-speaking West Africa, the economic consequences could be yet worse. The country of 20 million people
exports 40 percent of the world's cocoa, the raw material for chocolate, and supplies its landlocked neighbors with everything from rice to fuel.
Ivory Coast is taking the kind of aggressive anti-infection measures that its poorer, smaller western neighbors were slow to adopt. Hand washing stations have appeared at the entrances of government buildings and office towers in Abidjan, the bustling economic capital. People have abandoned the traditional three-kiss greeting.
Mass mobile text messages send out a government awareness campaign nationwide. And children, exposed to the information drive on radio and television, quarantine their classmates in a playground game they call "Ebola".
"It's without precedent," said Daouda Coulibaly, the epidemiologist charged with leading the effort. "We started back in March to explain to people that this is a real disease. It must be taken seriously."
The World Health Organization (WHO) has already warned that several neighboring countries are at risk. With the outbreak gathering pace, the WHO has said a $1 billion international response will be needed to keep the number of those infected within the "tens of thousands".
Coulibaly is working seven days a week to ensure that none of them is Ivorian, and the government has imposed draconian measures at its borders. Flights to and from Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia have been banned - provoking anger in those countries - and last month the western border was shut.
Dozens of people have been tested for the disease. The army is now patrolling the area and those caught crossing into Ivory Coast illicitly face an automatic 21-day quarantine.
A man hunting bush rats in violation of a government ban on bush meat, thought to be one way in which Ebola is transmitted, was condemned to five years in prison last month.
But experts warn that Ivory Coast may struggle to insulate itself completely due to its long, porous borders with both Guinea and Liberia - the country worst hit by the disease.
"The epidemic, particularly in Sierra Leone and Liberia, is outpacing our attempts to control it," said Marc Poncin, head of emergency response for medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres in Guinea. "Ivory Coast is the country most at risk. It's probably a question of time before it appears in Ivory Coast."
RENAISSANCE AT RISK
Little over three years after a civil war, the Ivorian economy is bouncing back. Growth hit 9.8 percent last year and investors' interest is booming.
A $750 million Eurobond issued in July attracted $4.75 billion worth of orders, and the government has said it will tap international debt markets again next year.
President Alassane Ouattara, who emerged victorious from the 2011 conflict largely thanks to military backing from France, is up for reelection next year. He is campaigning as the architect of an Ivorian renaissance but Ebola could jeopardize that.
"We're worried by Ebola in neighboring countries that are our economic and commercial partners," Ouattara said on Wednesday, in his first direct comments on the outbreak. "We're working to ensure that we maintain our strong rate of growth."
For Ronak Gopaldas, head of country risk analysis at South Africa's Rand Merchant Bank, the government knows its record is on the line: "Ebola risks puncturing all the good work that's been done and I think that's why they've been so proactive."
While economists assess Ebola's impact, it is clear that an economic calamity is brewing across Ivory Coast's borders. Economic growth in Liberia and Sierra Leone could drop by almost 3.5 percentage points, according to the International Monetary Fund, as Ebola cripples agriculture and services.
Prices there have rocketed as worried citizens rush to stock up on provisions and border closures disrupt imports.
Ivory Coast would face the same problems were Ebola to jump the border. But, with an economy that makes up 40 percent of the eight-nation CFA franc bloc, the repercussions would be regional, including higher inflation.
"We're already affected economically speaking because of the perception," Trade Minister Jean-Louis Billon told Reuters. "Those who are frightened are more those who know less about Africa and are coming to discover."
Though the country has yet to register a single case, at least two international conferences due to take place in Ivory Coast have been canceled. International cocoa exporters have restricted staff movements in the country, exposing the sector's vulnerability to the growing fear of Ebola.
"The more you go to the perception that things are getting out of control, the more you will have this psychological effect," said Alain Feler, IMF representative in Ivory Coast.
Citizens of Abidjan are wary. On packed public buses, people try to avoid touching. "It's often difficult because you can't avoid human contact," said student Cesar Kouame Kouakou. "But we try to do it because no-one knows what causes this sickness."
Ivorian authorities are heartened by events in Senegal and Nigeria, where relatively rapid government responses appear to have contained outbreaks.
After an initially slow start, hundreds of millions of dollars in international financial assistance are also beginning to pour into Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone to fund the Ebola fight and offset the economic damage.
President Barack Obama has announced that the United States plans to send 3,000 troops to the region.
For Coulibaly, the growing momentum is a positive step, but he worries that nations on the frontline are still being neglected. "The neighboring countries must be assisted financially, logistically, with material resources," he said. "We need to see that assistance now." [/b]
http://news.yahoo.com/west-african-powerhouse-ivory-coast-battles-keep-ebola-164129306--business.html
merit12: .mm
Moblord: Wait
sosodevf: cool
kolomax: Ok
eleojo23: Ok
kolomax: Ok
space bookers
Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by 9jahubcom(m): 6:49am On Sep 18, 2014
eya
Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by Chiefpriest1(m): 6:49am On Sep 18, 2014
At least on this Ebola issue,Nigeria seems to have done well. I am glad that the international community recognises that. Just that we have a way of taking one step forward and three steps backward
Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by Nobody: 6:52am On Sep 18, 2014
God save Ivory Coast! I still use most of their products smiley I wouldn't want my cream to come with Ebola sad

2 Likes

Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by gift01: 6:52am On Sep 18, 2014
One funny bank go come tell me to Wash hand inside bowl before I enter. Abeg where dem dey carry the water go? I'm becoming suspicious. #GTBank buy Sanitizers. Its not expensive. Just 350 naira times all your branches daily. Hmmm.... I'm thinking of selling Sanitizers

1 Like

Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by datguru: 6:52am On Sep 18, 2014
kolomax: Ok
9jahubcom: eya
emmanuel4758: .
kolomax: Ok
otijah: I think the best they can do themselve is to seek advice and strategies from other powerful nations e.g Nigeria
merit12: .mm
sosodevf: cool
chibwike: .
sammieguze: Prevention......
Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by Pavore9: 6:52am On Sep 18, 2014
Way to go.
Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by gift01: 6:53am On Sep 18, 2014
Reality on ground is that Nigeria must be prepared for another outbreak

2 Likes

Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by Nobody: 6:54am On Sep 18, 2014
Now that is a serious government.

1 Like

Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by segradinho: 6:54am On Sep 18, 2014
Goodluck to them

Good news for smart phone users, you can now purchase MTN and Etisalat Data Plans for as low as N400 for 250mb, Check out
this thread on Nairaland for full details https://www.nairaland.com/1852534/mtn-etisalat-data-cheapest-rate
Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by Dreyl(m): 6:56am On Sep 18, 2014
Ivory coast government are very active unlike nigerian Dull government...

1 Like

Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by priscaoge(f): 6:59am On Sep 18, 2014
Dreyl: Ivory coast government are very active unlike nigerian Dull government...
Nope I disagree with U. Fashola fought like a man to curb Ebola. FG did their best. It was an emergency case yet they tried!

10 Likes

Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by soldierdollar(m): 7:00am On Sep 18, 2014
You guys should stop booking space

1 Like

Re: West African Powerhouse Ivory Coast Battles To Keep Out Ebola by Sexytemi(f): 7:01am On Sep 18, 2014
hmmm, Na Baba God hand all of us they o, but I blive ebola shall not get to us or any of our family members, we Will only be hearing of it, and not experience it in Jesus name.

1 Like

(1) (2) (3) (Reply)

'My Pikin' Syrup Makers Jailed, Company Closed / Phytoscience Business Opportunity (stem Cell Products) / Soak Unripe Pawpaw In Water For 3 Days And Drink, For The Health Benefits

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 61
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.