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74 more vehicles to fight Ebola in Sierra Leone

WFP logistics

With World Bank funding to the government of Sierra Leone, the United Nations World Food Programme, WFP, has airlifted 20 ambulances and 10 mortuary pickup trucks to scale up government logistical capacity in response to the Ebola Virus Disease.

In a WFP statement released on Tuesday 21 October the group said the delivery constituted the first set of 74 vehicles worth US$4 million to be brought in by WFP from its logistical hub in Dubai to Freetown.

“The remaining 44 vehicles are expected in Freetown by sea in the forthcoming weeks”, it said.

The move follows a memorandum of understanding between the government of Sierra Leone and the UN agencies to implement the US$ 28 million World Bank-funded Ebola Response Project, of which US$ 9.5 million was allocated to WFP to deliver food and non-food items.

“As of 20 October 2014, WFP has already reached more than 300,000 Ebola-affected people in Sierra Leone with 4,000 metric tons of food. These include patients in treatment centres, survivors, quarantined families and communities”, according to the statement.

The Bank’s partnership with government and the UN agencies was part of concerted efforts to stop the rapid spread of the disease in the country. It sought to scale up the country's logistical and operational capacity and to mitigate the economic impact on affected communities.

“We have been hearing alarming stories of Ebola patients going helpless for days in their homes and villages due to logistical constraints. I hope these ambulances will contribute to alleviating the suffering of many families and curbing the spread of the disease”, said Gon Myers, WFP Country Director in Freetown.

“At WFP, providing logistical services for government and humanitarian partners is one of our key priorities in response to this unprecedented health crisis.”

The released said reports from the National Ebola Response Centre (NERC) showed that emergency calls to the Ebola response centres had increased from 300 calls per day in early September to more than 1,400 calls per day in October. It said about 80 percent of the calls required immediate follow up actions to see a sick person or take a suspected Ebola case to the nearest health centre.

“But it takes several days to get a response due to logistical constraints and shortage of medical personnel,” the release said.

World Bank acting country manager, Yusuf Bob Foday, said: “The health workers are on the frontline of the battle against this outbreak, fighting a dreaded disease that appears to be taking the upper hand. We cannot allow the morale of these brave doctors, nurses and volunteers to be broken because of lack of logistics. We must therefore provide them with what it takes to carry on with their work, to continue to save lives and to win this battle. So we hope that this delivery will improve mobility, shorten the response time and make the difference between life and death. For the people in quarantine communities, holding and treatment centres, we believe the nutritional assistance will bring relief to their suffering”.

Since the outbreak WFP had supplied key technical assistance including construction, storage, procurement and transport particularly to medical partners to ensure the best possible humanitarian response to the health emergency. It also provided air transport to ensure movement of humanitarian aid workers and equipment within the three Ebola-hit countries of Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guniea.

To ensure continued assistance over the next six months, WFP said it required a further US$24 million for its Ebola emergency operation in the country.

(C) Politico 23/10/14

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