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SANDF Ready to Evacuate Peacekeeping Troops due to Potential Ebola Threat.

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Temmy, a fun loving creative writer, is a graduate of Lead City University. She simply loves life, others and God. Aside writing, she enjoys counselling and encouraging others.‎

A rapid extraction plan is in place to withdraw South African peacekeeping troops deployed to the Democratic Republic of Congo in the face of a potential Ebola threat.

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The plan follows the World Health Organisation’s classification of Kenya as a “high-risk” country for the spread of the deadly virus.

This is the most serious warning to date by the WHO that Ebola could spread to East Africa.

Yesterday, the third Ebola victim in Nigeria’s capital, Lagos, died, while Liberia is struggling to save doctors as they wait for an experimental serum.

The WHO has declared the Ebola outbreak -which has killed 1 013 people and infected 1 848 others – a global public health emergency.

More 1300 South African troops are deployed in the eastern DRC’s highly volatile region.

A possible withdrawal, warned military analyst Helmoed Heitman, would create a security vacuum and pose a major risk to the region.

Additional threats, said Heitman, included the Southern African Development Community’s limited military capabilities to contain or slow down the spread of the virus.

SA National Defence Force spokesman Lieutenant-General Xolani Mabanga yesterday confirmed an extraction plan was in place should the troops come under threat from Ebola.

“Ebola has not reached the region but we are not leaving anything to chance. We are taking precautionary measures to ensure the protection of our troops.

“The SANDF [and] the Health Department are working closely with the UN and other world organisations leading efforts to stop the spread of Ebola.”

He said awareness programmes were being run with troops on the symptoms of Ebola, as well as how to manage and contain soldiers suspected of being infected.

“We’re also constantly monitoring international warning systems to ensure our troops’ safety.

“Should our troops come under threat of infection, we will move them to save them … we have the necessary extraction plans.”

Heitman said if troops were withdrawn, it would collapse the intervention brigade they were part of.

“Our soldiers make up a third of the brigade. If they pull out it would be a serious blow because we would not be the only ones to withdraw under the threat of Ebola,” Heitman said.

He said any withdrawal would create a vacuum for rebels to fill.

He said should Ebola spread to the SADC, there would be challenges for the region’s militaries trying to help slow it down.

“There are only a handful of SADC countries, like South Africa, which have the necessary chemical and biological capabilities.

“Countries with larger populations, limited military capabilities [chemical and biological] and poor medical facilities would have problems.”

Heitman said militaries would have to be called on to close borders and limit the transnational and national movement of people.

Lucille Blumberg, deputy director of the National Institute for Communicable Diseases, said many African countries, such as the DRC, had rapid response systems in place to quickly and successfully contain outbreaks.

“We have the ability to deal with such outbreaks successfully. In terms of the SADC, we have agreed to use our high security laboratory, which has the capacity to conduct Ebola diagnostics, to do any testing on suspected cases which occur in the region.”

She confirmed the centre’s head would take a team to Sierra Leone with a mobile laboratory to provide on-site Ebola testing.

“The assistance will be used to confirm or exclude Ebola cases. The key intervention is to identify and stop the further spread.”

Source:times live

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