The deadly Ebola virus landed on US
soil for the first time on Saturday when a private jet carrying one of two
American aid workers infected by the disease touched down in Georgia,
television images showed.
A specially fitted jet carrying Kent Brantly, a doctor who
was treating Ebola patients in Liberia,
arrived at Dobbins Air Reserve Base outside Atlanta,
Georgia shortly before 11:50 am (1550 GMT) local time, WSB TV
reported.
PRESIDENT OBAMA |
Footage of the arrival filmed from long-distance showed the
jet pulling up at an aircraft hangar where it was met by an ambulance and
several vehicles.
The convoy then appeared to pull away from the aircraft,
headed for an isolation unit at Emory
University Hospital
in Atlanta.
The ambulance’s journey to hospital was also screened live
on several networks.
Brantly and Christian missionary worker Nancy Writebol are
in serious but stable condition after becoming infected as they helped to
battle the worst Ebola outbreak in history which has left more than 700 people
dead in west Africa since March.
Both patients are being flown home on a Gulfstream private
jet fitted with a collapsible, mobile isolation unit designed to transfer
employees from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) exposed
to contagious diseases.
- State-of-art isolation -
Brantly and Writebol are to be treated at Emory’s
state-of-the-art isolation unit, which has previously treated an individual
infected during the SARS epidemic in 2003.
It is one of only four facilities in the United
States and is located near the CDC
headquarters in Atlanta.
“It is physically separate from other patient areas and has
unique equipment and infrastructure that provide an extraordinarily high level
of clinical isolation,” Emory Healthcare said in a statement.
It the first time a patient infected with Ebola has been
treated anywhere in the United States.
The arrival of the first case has triggered anxiety in some
quarters, with television personality Donald Trump arguing that the patients
should be barred from returning to American soil.
But Bruce Ribner, who oversees the isolation unit at Emory,
dismissed the criticism of the decision to airlift the aid workers.
“They have gone over on a humanitarian mission [and] they
have become infected giving medical care,” said Ribner.
“We owe them the right to receive the best medical care that
is available.”
The US State Department said the “safety and security of US
citizens” remained the paramount concern.
“Every precaution is being taken to move the patients safely
and securely, to provide critical care en route on a noncommercial aircraft,
and to maintain strict isolation upon arrival,” State Department deputy spokeswoman
Marie Harf said.
The latest outbreak of Ebola in west Africa has killed 729
people of the more than 1,300 infected since March.
The World Health Organization has said the fast-moving
outbreak was causing “catastrophic” loss of life in the affected countries of Guinea,
Liberia, Nigeria
and Sierra Leone.
Ebola, which has no vaccine, causes severe muscular pain,
fever, headaches and, in the worst cases, unstoppable bleeding.
It has killed around two-thirds of those it has infected
since its emergence in 1976, with two outbreaks registering fatality rates
approaching 90 percent. (AFP)
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