African country starts screening travellers from America and Spain - TopicsExpress



          

African country starts screening travellers from America and Spain for Ebola. Rwanda turns the tables on Europe’s and America’s anti-Africa Ebola measures BY PROF. WOLFGANG H. THOME, PH.D., ETN AFRICA CORRESPONDENT | OCT 22, 2014 Rwanda turns the tables on Europe’s and America’s anti-Africa Ebola measures Rwanda has with immediate effect introduced new rules for visitors from America and Spain coming to the country. The Rwandan decision makes it clear that the way visitors from Africa, especially those who are from Eastern and Southern Africa where there is no Ebola outbreak, are treated in European and American airports, regularly shown on the global news channels, can only be tolerated for so long before some level of equitable response is formulated, as is now the case in Rwanda. Cognizant of the fact that active Ebola outbreaks are ongoing in both countries, visitors coming from there or having traveled through the two countries, after the first screening at the airport on arrival, must report for at least 21 days, or until the end of their visit if concluded earlier, to the authorities by phone between 0700 hours and 2000 hours. Besides giving their itinerary details on arrival they must dial 114 and give a personal health update, though it is not known how it can be monitored independently if a person actually does tell the truth or might not conceal a slight fever or headache. Visitors from the Ebola affected countries in West Africa continue to be denied entry into Rwanda, being Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Senegal, until the outbreaks there – Senegal was yesterday given the all clear by the World Health Organization (WHO) – are considered over. This is the first time that visitors from America and Spain are actually treated differently from the standard format of screening which has been going on across Eastern Africa, where ALL arriving passengers must now fill medical questionnaires/forms and then have their temperature checked, to allow for an early detection of anyone arriving seriously ill. In fact, in both Uganda and Kenya, arriving passengers were taken into isolation, as at least one known case was known of a few weeks ago in Kigali, only to be given the all clear when the tests came back negative for Ebola. There are stories that teachers in Britain, who visited Kenya recently, were boycotted by parents who threatened to keep their kids from attending school.
Posted on: Wed, 22 Oct 2014 07:13:07 +0000

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