EBOLA Doomer Doug thought the WHO et al had WON THE EBOLA BATTLE? 3-21-2015

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
The endless lies and deceit continue unabated by the globalist elite. They lie about Fukushima; they lie about Ebola. Doomer Doug asks the obvious question: If Ebola is so "under control" why is yet another three day national lockdown happening. :screw:

I will say it again, gang. THERE ARE 100,000 ROTTING CORPSES OUT IN THE BOONIES OF SIERRA LEONE, GUINEA AND LIBERIA. EBOLA IS NOT UNDER CONTROL. EBOLA IS WAITING PATIENTLY, SPREADING WIDELY AND UNCHECKED ALL OVER AFRICA AT THIS POINT.



http://news.yahoo.com/leone-president-orders-three-day-national-lockdown-against-150740552.html



Sierra Leone orders three-day lockdown against Ebola
AFP
1 hour ago

Freetown (AFP) - Sierra Leone's President Ernest Koroma ordered the country's entire population Saturday to stay in their homes for three days in a bid to stem the spread of the deadly Ebola epidemic.
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"All Sierra Leoneans must stay at home for three days," he announced, expanding a previous order for a lockdown in the capital Freetown and northern areas of the country nationwide.

"I have made my personal commitment to do whatever it takes to get to zero Ebola infections and I call on every Sierra Leonean in every community to pull together," he added.

People will be ordered to stay home from 0600 GMT March 27 to 1800 GMT March 29, with "no trading activities across the country".

Authorities in the Muslim-majority state will lift the lockdown for part of the day to allow church services on Palm Sunday.

Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone -- which have been the centres of the outbreak which has killed more than 10,000 people -- have set a goal of cutting off the disease's spread by April 16.
View gallery
Sierra Leone President Ernest Bai Koroma seen arriving …
Sierra Leone President Ernest Bai Koroma seen arriving in Brussels to attend a conference on Ebola o …

Liberia had been on the point of declaring an end to the epidemic in the country when a new case appeared in its capital Monrovia on Friday.

The infected woman is the wife of a man already cured of the disease, an anonymous source close the case told AFP. "The situation is under control. We are investigating how she contracted the virus," government spokesman Lewis Brown said Saturday.

One of the deadliest viruses known to man, Ebola is spread only through direct contact with the bodily fluids of the recently deceased or an infected person showing symptoms, such as fever or vomiting.

The World Health Organization said Ebola can still be transmitted in sperm 82 days after a patient carrying the virus is cured.

The worst-ever outbreak of the virus has claimed almost 3,700 lives in Sierra Leone, one of three impoverished west African nations that have seen their economies and healthcare systems wrecked by the crisis.

"The economic development of our country and the lives of our people continue to be threatened by the ongoing presence of Ebola in Sierra Leone," President Koroma said. "The future of our country and the aspirations of our children are at stake."
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
Liberia had been on the point of declaring an end to the epidemic in the country when a new case appeared in its capital Monrovia on Friday.

The infected woman is the wife of a man already cured of the disease, an anonymous source close the case told AFP. "The situation is under control. We are investigating how she contracted the virus," government spokesman Lewis Brown said Saturday.


Gee, this sounds like Ebola is "under control."
 

mzkitty

I give up.
You'll love this one too, Doomer Doug:

I read some quick blurb earlier this week that one of those backwards hell-holes has decided that they are going to stop FGM for as long as ebola is a threat. NOT because it's the right thing to do, mind you, but only because of ebola. I didn't bother posting it.

:rolleyes:
 

Sleeping Cobra

TB Fanatic
Sierra Leone orders three-day lockdown against Ebola

1 hour ago

Freetown (AFP) - Sierra Leone's President Ernest Koroma ordered the country's entire population Saturday to stay in their homes for three days in a bid to stem the spread of the deadly Ebola epidemic.

"All Sierra Leoneans must stay at home for three days," he announced, expanding a previous order for a lockdown in the capital Freetown and northern areas of the country nationwide.

"I have made my personal commitment to do whatever it takes to get to zero Ebola infections and I call on every Sierra Leonean in every community to pull together," he added.

People will be ordered to stay home from 0600 GMT March 27 to 1800 GMT March 29, with "no trading activities across the country".

Authorities in the Muslim-majority state will lift the lockdown for part of the day to allow church services on Palm Sunday.

Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone -- which have been the centres of the outbreak which has killed more than 10,000 people -- have set a goal of cutting off the disease's spread by April 16.

Liberia had been on the point of declaring an end to the epidemic in the country when a new case appeared in its capital Monrovia on Friday.

The infected woman is the wife of a man already cured of the disease, an anonymous source close the case told AFP. "The situation is under control. We are investigating how she contracted the virus," government spokesman Lewis Brown said Saturday.

One of the deadliest viruses known to man, Ebola is spread only through direct contact with the bodily fluids of the recently deceased or an infected person showing symptoms, such as fever or vomiting.

The World Health Organization said Ebola can still be transmitted in sperm 82 days after a patient carrying the virus is cured.

The worst-ever outbreak of the virus has claimed almost 3,700 lives in Sierra Leone, one of three impoverished west African nations that have seen their economies and healthcare systems wrecked by the crisis.

"The economic development of our country and the lives of our people continue to be threatened by the ongoing presence of Ebola in Sierra Leone," President Koroma said. "The future of our country and the aspirations of our children are at stake."

http://news.yahoo.com/leone-president-orders-three-day-national-lockdown-against-150740552.html
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
FGM is FEMALE GENITAL MUTILATION and involves the removal of specific female body parts. It is an African tradition, that has been linked to Islam, although it is not historically a Muslim issue. At any rate, the blood, guts and pain involved obviously increase the spread of Ebola. Ebola is spread by the classic from Dr. Strangelove's "precious bodily fluids."

It is typical of these THIRD WORLD AFRICAN FECAL HOLES they have no problem morally with strapping a ten year old girl down and cutting out her clitoris for some obscene reason related to "a woman shouldn't have pleasure in sex" or whatever.

Yes Virginia, these really are THIRD WORLD FECES PILES FULL OF CORRUPT AND INCOMPETENT PEOPLE EVERYWHERE YOU LOOK.

Female Genital Mutilation is a barbaric, disgusting practice undertaken by third world trash.
 

eens

Nuns with Guns
I still can't get over what a great job that ebola czar (what IS his name?) did in this country. I say we send him to Africa and let him take care of the problem over there now.
 

Countrymouse

Country exile in the city
If you REALLY think Ebola has been quelled, you need to follow http://raconteurreport.blogspot.com/ really closely. Now that he's gainfully employed, he'll have the goods like almost no one else outside of CIDRAP.

This is a GREAT source! THANK you! I still VERY much miss the reports we used to get from that nurse who was on the "flu" site---since they kicked her off the ebola coverage there seemed to go back to just parroting what the MSM said, so I stopped going there.

This guy, however, seems to be a good source of info.

Here's one of his Ebola posts (still looking for more):

Like Getting Ebola Wasn't Bad Enough

Kenema, Sierra Leone (Al Jazeera )- Massah Kamara sat patiently with her brother Momoh, her haunted eyes focused somewhere in the middle distance beyond the walls of the post-Ebola clinic.
Three months earlier, doctors gave her the good news - after weeks of fighting the disease, she had finally beaten Ebola. She would live.

Back in her home neighbourhood of Nyandeyama, a quiet suburb of sandy streets and mango trees, she found out 22 members of her family were dead, including her parents. She had no money, so was unable to go back to her tailoring business, and many of her possessions had been burned by terrified neighbours.

Then, just when she thought things couldn't get worse, she began to lose her eyesight.

"My eyes are dark," she said sadly. "Even when the sun is shining, my eyes are dark." Kamara said she was happy to have survived Ebola, but fear and misery were etched onto her face.
Kamara is one of 40 percent of Ebola survivors to have gone on to develop eye problems, according to a recent study carried out by the World Health Organisation and Kenema's District Health Management Team. It has been more than a month since the district saw it's last case of Ebola, and attention is turning to the plight of survivors.
The results of the survey, a copy of which was seen by Al Jazeera, outline a raft of physical, social and psychological problems the survivors are experiencing.
Seventy-nine percent, for example, now suffer from joint pain; 42 percent have problems sleeping, while more than one-third of those surveyed experienced peeling of the skin. Many others reported problems with their reproductive system.
Post-survival effects
"There is so little written about post-Ebola problems," said Maggie Nanyonga, a WHO consultant working with Ebola survivors in Kenema district. "We don't know if it's the drugs that are causing it, or the disease, or just stress."
In a small room at the government hospital in Kenema, now known simply as "Psychosocial", volunteers busily transcribed forms with survivors' complaints. "Serious backbone pain. Difficulty breathing. Properties burned but not replaced," reads one.

"Ear and joint pains. Poor health with red eyes," reads another.

"Tired legs and weakness. Cannot see clearly," reads a third.Health education officer Michael Vandi said the eye problems are of particular concern. "We just weren't expecting this. A lot of them are experiencing it, often combined with headaches," he said.The head of the hospital's eye department, Ernest Challey, said he believes he has found the cause - a condition called Uveitis that occurs when the innermost coating of the eye becomes inflamed.
It is triggered by problems with the immune system, a viral infection, and sometimes trauma, he explained. It leaves patients with dim and blurred vision, and pain when they're in bright light. If left untreated, said Challey, it can lead to blindness.

But the physical symptoms are just a part of the immense challenge many Ebola survivors face. "Sometimes I cry when they tell me their stories," said one nurse after writing down Kamara's details in the post-Ebola clinic, the first of its kind.

And it gets worse, according to the rest of the story: the locals treat survivors like pariahs, having burned their few belongings, and shun them afterwards, so they're left with no place to live and no job, as all the health problems pile on.

There's never been a post-Ebola clinic, because historically, the Ebola Survivors Clubs have usually been able to meet in a phone booth.

But with a few thousand survivors this time out of at least 20,000 victims, medical science is getting a new chapter in Ebola treatment: follow-up prognosis for survivors. And it isn't pretty.

Not least of which because what little assistance is going there is aimed at trying to curb the actual outbreak, not deal with the aftermath.

We never had to do much of that before...
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
We are going to be dealing with the political and economic impact of Ebola in Africa for decades into the future. For one thing, the chocolate crop wasn't completely harvested in West Africa in 2014 due to Ebola.
 
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