A U.N. convoy of soldiers passes a screen displaying a message on Ebola on a street in Abidjan
August 14, 2014. REUTERS/Luc Gnago
Thu, 14 Aug 2014 22:10 GMTHunger
is spreading fast as farmers die leaving crops rotting in fields.
Truckers scared of the highly infectious disease halt deliveries. Shops
close and major airlines have shut down routes, isolating large swathes
of the countries.
The Mano River region, home to about 1 million
people and an epicenter for the deadly disease, is a major concern and
the issue was raised on Wednesday with U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki
Moon, said Tim Evans, senior director for health at the World Bank.
"There
has been a lot of inflation in food prices and a lot of difficulty in
getting food to the quarantined population," he said in an interview.
The
World Bank, along with the UN and the World Health Organisation, is
urgently assessing how to make emergency food deliveries, or they face
the danger of a deepening health crisis from malnutrition and the spread
of other diseases, he said.
"This is emerging as an important
part of the immediate response," Evans said. "We are looking at exactly
what the needs are and where, and then looking at how we contribute to
making sure that food gets to the right places."
Meanwhile, the
United Nation's World Food Programme said it has declared Guinea,
Liberia and Sierra Leone - the three countries reeling from over 1,000
deaths from Ebola - a Level Three food emergency, its highest threat. It
is urgently mobilising teams to get food into the area and prevent
widespread hunger and deaths.
"We are pulling out all the stops," said Steve Taravella, WFP spokesman in Washington.
His
agency already is extraordinarily stretched. Never before has it faced
six top-level emergencies all at once - in Syria, Iraq, South Sudan,
Cameroon, Central African Republic and now the Ebola hit-countries.
"It is a dramatic, profound situation," he said.
For West Africa, the stability of the whole region is at stake if hunger and disease spread uncontrolled, said Evans.
"It certainly is a threat to national security," he said, stressing that a comprehensive response is needed.
But
for Nigeria, the World Bank director expressed optimism it has acted
promptly to contain spread of the Ebola by reaching those who came into
contact with its first victim there.
"It suggests at this point that it is relatively contained," he said.
Longer
term, the Ebola outbreak has exposed the danger from chronic
underfunding of national healthcare systems and the need to invest in
regional laboratories to test and manage infectious diseases, he said.
Most
countries fell far short of a 2000 pledge, known as the Abuja
Declaration, to devote 15 percent of their budgets to healthcare. The
World Bank "absolutely" expects more lending for health in the years
ahead, Evans said.
http://www.trust.org/item/20140814220245-ij11z/