UN chief defends returning Ebola aid workers

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BBC Online :
UN chief Ban Ki-moon has said discrimination against aid workers who return home from the Ebola crisis in West Africa is “unacceptable”.
Strict quarantine rules are hampering aid efforts when more health workers are needed in order to deal with the crisis, he told BBC News in Nairobi.
International efforts have been insufficient but are now “catching up”, the UN secretary general added.
“We have been really trying to mobilise in a massive way,” he said.
Ban told the BBC’s Dennis Okari that the World Health Organization (WHO) and scientists around the world were trying to develop vaccines.
The UN’s main objectives included stopping the virus, finding a treatment and preventing the spread of Ebola, he said.
The medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF) warned on Friday that some mandatory US state Ebola quarantine measures were having a “chilling effect” on its work.
“There is rising anxiety and confusion among staff members in the field over what they may face when they return home upon completion of their assignments in West Africa,” executive director Sophie Delaunay, told Reuters news agency.
One of the charity’s volunteers has defied orders by the US state of Maine that she remain quarantined in her house after being in Sierra Leone.
The nurse, Kaci Hickox, who recently returned to the US from treating Ebola patients in Africa, has vowed to fight a court order that would enforce a 21-day quarantine.
US President Barack Obama has warned that overly restrictive measures could discourage volunteering in West Africa.

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