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Return of Ebola: 700 quarantined in S’Leone

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After a 16-year-old girl was killed in the new outbreak of Ebola in Sierra Leone, the health authorities said on Tuesday that they had quarantined almost 700 people as they battled to contain the deadly disease.

The teenager died Sunday in a rural suburb of the city of Makeni, in a northern province that had not recorded a single case of the deadly virus in nearly six months.

“Over 680 people in the village of Robureh are now under a 21-day quarantine,” Amadu Thullah, a spokesman for the local Ebola response centre told AFP.

The girl’s death came two weeks after a 67-year-old food trader was killed by the tropical fever in the neighbouring district of Kambia, but the two outbreaks are not linked.

The centre said those locked down included her parents, close relatives and classmates.

“They are classified as high risk although they have not exhibited any signs and symptoms of the disease.

“The surveillance team of the Ebola response centre have intensified their investigations and is working to nip the issue in the bud,” said the health ministry spokesman, Seray Turay.

Read also: Ebola forces Sierra Leone to host Ivory Coast in Nigeria

The National Ebola Response Centre (NERC) said 1,524 people were in quarantine across the two districts.

A spokesman for the local response team told AFP that the new outbreak has extremely affected the morale of the people in affected Makeni area of the country’s largest northern city.

“It is a wake-up call that Ebola is still in the country but we have an overwhelming turnout of our partners (and) the coordination response is fantastic,” he added.

On August 24, President Ernest Bai Koroma led a festive ceremony celebrating the discharge of Sierra Leone’s last known Ebola patient, from a Makeni hospital.

No new cases had been recorded in more than two weeks, allowing Sierra Leone to join neighbouring Liberia in the countdown to being declared Ebola-free.

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