UN warns Ebola epidemic 'not yet contained'

U.N. special envoy on Ebola Dr. David Nabarro addresses the media during a special meeting on Ebola at the WHO headquarters in Geneva, January 25, 2015. REUTERS Photo

The Ebola epidemic is decreasing but is still present in a third of the areas of the three worst affected west African nations, UN Ebola coordinator David Nabarro warned Jan. 29.
      
"The number of cases is decreasing week by week and getting to zero in many places... but we still see occasional flare-ups and we still see some surprises with new cases out of our contact lists," Nabarro told AFP.
      
"That means that the epidemic is not contained yet," he said.
      
Nabarro was speaking at the African Union headquarters, as leaders gather a day ahead of a summit meeting where Ebola is a key issue for discussion.
      
The worst outbreak of the virus in history has seen nearly 9,000 deaths in a year -- almost all in the three west African countries of Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone -- and sparked a major health scare worldwide.
      
The three nations have been devastated by the outbreak, which began in December 2013, but all have seen recent signs that the virus is on the wane, with the number of new cases dropping weekly.
      
Liberia, once the country worst hit by  the outbreak, hopes to have no new cases by the end of next month.
      
"We must maintain the effort with even greater intensity, the forthcoming rainy season is a concern," Nabarro said.
      
But he also said there were key lessons from the response to Ebola, and said that a proposals to set up an African equivalent to the United States' Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) would be a step forward.
      
"I took us too long to be ready, we need a better response capacity," he said. "The African CDC will allow the AU to be much quicker."       

On Friday and Saturday African leaders...

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