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EBOLA: 6 MILLION CHILDREN OUT OF SCHOOL

naijalog by naijalog
October 10, 2014
in Top Stories
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EBOLA: 6 MILLION CHILDREN OUT OF SCHOOL
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No fewer than 6 million school-aged children are out of school  in three countries worst affected by the deadly Ebola Virus Disease.

Schools are closed in Sierra Leone, while schools  in Liberia and Guinea run skeletal services.

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World Bank’s president Jim Yong Kim said at least 6 million children are unable to go to school, and thousands have been orphaned, due to the devastating effects of Ebola, since February.

For six days a week, Sierra Leone’s children can listen to four-hour lessons on dozens of the country’s radio stations, along with its only television channel, the AFP reported.

Already, growth projections for 2014 in the three most-affected countries have already been cut significantly.

The World Bank Group released an economic impact assessment yesterday stating that if the epidemic is not quickly contained and was to significantly infect people in neighboring countries, some of which have much larger economies, the two-year regional financial impact could reach $32.6 billion dollars by the end of 2015.

 

 

 

 

 

Aside the more than 8000 infections and nearly 4000 deaths due to the Ebola epidemic, the outbreak of the deadly virus has been devastating to the means of livelihood particularly in the worse-hit countries of Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone. World Bank’s president Jim Yong Kim said at least 6 million children are unable to go to school, and thousands have been orphaned. Many businesses have shut down their operations; farmers are unable to harvest their crops. Airline flights are being cancelled; trade has diminished.

In his opening remarks at the High-Level Meeting on the Impact of the Ebola Crisis: A Perspective from the Countries in Washington on Thursday Kim said “The Ebola crisis has already had a profound impact on the millions of people in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. People are going hungry and are unable to go to work.

Growth projections for 2014 in the three most-affected countries have already been cut significantly. The World Bank Group released an economic impact assessment yesterday stating that if the epidemic is not quickly contained and was to significantly infect people in neighboring countries, some of which have much larger economies, the two-year regional financial impact could reach $32.6 billion dollars by the end of 2015.

“This is a potentially catastrophic impact. Over the past week, we have had a patient die of Ebola here in America, and now at least one infected nurse in Spain. We are likely to see more cases, in more countries. Over the past month, we’ve seen a stepped up global response, with support from a number of countries and organizations at this table.

“But it’s clear that we are still way behind the curve, and that we have to quickly speed up, and scale up, the global response to this crisis. One issue I’d like to raise briefly is the critical need for more trained health workers in the countries. The World Health Organization has just estimated that Liberia alone needs an additional 360 foreign medical staff today to treat those infected. We now must reach out to countries around the world to urgently send health workers to the three countries.

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