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2014-09-20 -Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
Ebola Screening for Nigeria's Mecca-Bound Pilgrims
We'd been wondering about the intersection of the haj and ebola. Here is Nigeria's answer.
[AnNahar] With some 76,000 Nigerian Moslems expected this year at the hajj in Soddy Arabia
...a kingdom taking up the bulk of the Arabian peninsula. Its primary economic activity involves exporting oil and soaking Islamic rubes on the annual hajj pilgrimage. The country supports a large number of princes in whatcha might call princely splendor. When the oil runs out the rest of the world is going to kick sand in the Soddy national face...
, organization was always going to be a major logistical undertaking.

But after more than 2,600 deaths from Ebola in West Africa this year, including eight in Nigeria, the authorities have had to put in extra security measures to allay fears about its possible spread outside the region.

Nigeria is the only country of the five in the region affected by the mass outbreak of hemorrhagic fever that has been given permission to send its pilgrims to Mecca for the world's largest gathering of Moslems.

One pilgrim, Afolabi Inabo, said she was sure the measures would work. "Ebola cannot spread because we have sanitisers, we wash our hands, we have soap, we have masks, we have (latex) gloves," she told Agence France Presse
. At the hajj cargo terminal at Murtala Mohammed International Airport in Lagos and at other departure points across the country, that means a three-tier health screening check before they are even allowed to board the plane.

On Thursday, five busloads of pilgrims from Oyo state in southwest Nigeria arrived at the terminal, all dressed in the same yellow and beige patterned cloth for easy identification in the Moslem holy city.

The men, in "buba and sokoto" -- traditional long robe and trousers -- formed one queue while the women, their heads covered by the hijab in the same pattern, lined up separately.

Shopping bags carried on heads were put down as workers from the Ports Health Authority used contactless thermometers to check the travelers' temperatures; fever is one symptom of the virus.

Just one woman was taken aside for secondary screening but later allowed to proceed.

Another queue formed at a water tank at the compound entrance gates. A helpful official squirted soap from a bottle.

One pilgrim, Afolabi Inabo, said she was sure the measures would work.

"Ebola cannot spread because we have sanitisers, we wash our hands, we have soap, we have masks, we have (latex) gloves," she told Agence La Belle France Presse.

Some 35,000 pilgrims nationwide have already undergone the same procedure, while both the state and federal governments in Nigeria have carried out health checks even before the pilgrims get on the bus.

- Vigilant -
Nigeria has been widely praised for its response to Ebola, despite initial fears that the virus could spread like wildfire in the crowded megacity of Lagos, where the first case was detected in July.

Health Minister Onyebuchi Chukwu said on Wednesday that no case of Ebola had been detected in Nigeria for a week, although four people were still under surveillance in Lagos and 344 in the southern oil city of Port Harcourt.

Oguntimehin Olukayode, from the Lagos State health ministry, told news hounds that Nigeria had responded "tremendously well" but it was important to be vigilant -- particularly with the hajj such a crowded event.

Some two million people are expected at the hajj next month, according to the Saudi authorities.

"The idea behind the screening all passengers in and out of Nigeria is basically to make sure that Nigeria doesn't export any case to any country and at the same time we don't import any case," said Olukayode.

"It's part of that overall role that Nigeria is looking to ensure this doesn't become a problem."

Alex Okoh, from the Ports Health Authority in Lagos, said officials were all too aware of how easily an infected person could get into Nigeria after the first case arrived unwell on a flight from the Liberian capital Monrovia.

Checks have since been stepped up at seaports and stronger measures put in place at land borders as well as illegal routes into the country.

For the hajj, more than 6,000 pilgrims have been checked and approved for travel in Lagos so far, she said.

"It's huge," she said of the operation, which is backed by the World Health Organization. "So far, so good. We haven't had any suspect cases for Ebola on the hajj pilgrimage," she said.
Posted by trailing wife 2014-09-20 00:00|| || Front Page|| [6 views ]  Top

#1 A totally genius plan whose only flaw is that it takes from 2 to 21 days after infection for symptoms to appear, according to WHO.
Posted by SteveS 2014-09-20 02:42||   2014-09-20 02:42|| Front Page Top

#2 And if hand sanitizer and rubber gloves are all you need then there should be no problem, right?

Mecca. Yeah. What are we paying the CIA for, by the way? What would the Church Committee say to a MASSIVE outbreak of Ebola in Mecca? No? Only 8 cases of Ebola death in Nigeria? Can't do much in Mecca with that. Even 8,000 would be insufficient. But it depends on the Will of Allah...and hand sanitizer.
Posted by Big Thromoth3646 2014-09-20 07:47||   2014-09-20 07:47|| Front Page Top

#3 Bingo, SteveS.

Nigeria is the only country of the five in the region . . . that has been given permission to send its pilgrims to Mecca

That's good. As is the fact that there are only 4 people still under surveillance in Lagos.

However: they're monitoring 344 people in Port Harcourt?? Because of one infected person in Lagos who slipped away a couple of weeks ago. That's all it takes to start a new chain of transmission.
Posted by RandomJD 2014-09-20 10:28||   2014-09-20 10:28|| Front Page Top

#4 As a final precaution, they're being flown on Malaysian Airways.
Posted by ed in texas 2014-09-20 12:22||   2014-09-20 12:22|| Front Page Top

#5 The Haj could be the real apocalypse for Islam.

Given the ease with which Ebola/Marburg transmits and its ability to breach all but the most rigid of Class IV biohazard protection, a couple of incubating cases of Ebola amongst the millions of people in Mekkah congregating around the Kabah, Ebola could find itself in every Moslem country in the world and the disease could become a ghastly pandemic for everyone.

The potential for horrendous mass deaths on the scale of the great plagues of the middle ages is nothing to sneeze at. Once this stuff gets to Mekkah and spread among the pilgrams, who also come from the US, and other Western countries, it will spread like wildfire.

I don't think we want to wish the plague of Ebola on the Moslems right now, Ebola is nothing to hope for.
Posted by Bill Clinton 2014-09-20 12:40||   2014-09-20 12:40|| Front Page Top

#6 "Ebola cannot spread because we have sanitisers, we wash our hands, we have soap, we have masks, we have (latex) gloves,"

Bullshit.
Posted by Redneck Jim 2014-09-20 13:41||   2014-09-20 13:41|| Front Page Top

#7 Hajj: "come for the Kaaba, stay for the fever and hemorrhaging"
Posted by Frank G 2014-09-20 14:00||   2014-09-20 14:00|| Front Page Top

#8 dammit ed, I was just figuring out the buttons for that monitor too.
Posted by swksvolFF 2014-09-20 14:35||   2014-09-20 14:35|| Front Page Top

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