International
Abbas Dulleh / AP

Violence erupts in Liberia; American doctor recovers

Soldiers' clampdown on an entire community turns violent

Calm returned on Thursday to the slum of West Point in Liberia's capital, which was sealed off this week in the government's attempt to halt the spread of Ebola, a day after clashes erupted between residents and security forces enforcing the quarantine. Meanwhile, a U.S. aid worker who was infected in Liberia has recovered and was to be discharged from an Atlanta hospital.

Both Dr. Kent Brantly and another American aid worker who was also infected had received ZMapp, an experimental and unproven treatment for Ebola. Sources told Al Jazeera America that it is expected that Dr. Brantly will be leaving the hospital today.

Three Liberians currently receiving the same treatment in Liberia, the first and so far only Africans to get the drug, were showing "very positive signs of recovery," Liberia's information ministry said earlier this week. A Spaniard who had contracted Ebola and also received the treatment died. The drug supply is now exhausted, the U.S. manufacturer has said.

A resident of the impoverished West Point neighborhood of Monrovia, Richard Kieh, said "the township was quiet last night; but what we now need is food."

Many residents of West Point, located on a peninsula in the seaside capital, are fearful they'll be cut off from food since many market traders are stuck behind the barricades. Food prices were already rising on Wednesday.

Officials from the World Health Organization were visiting two hospitals in Monrovia on Thursday that are treating Ebola patients. The two treatment centers are struggling to keep up with the influx of patients. Liberia is being hit especially hard by the dreaded virus that has killed at least 1,350 people in Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea and Nigeria.

A nationwide nighttime curfew, first imposed countrywide in Liberia on Wednesday night, appeared to have been put in place without major incident.

The current outbreak in West Africa is the largest ever, and officials have said that treatment centers, especially in Liberia, are filling up faster than new ones can be opened or expanded. This leaves the sick packing hallways, potentially infecting more people.

Ebola is transmitted by direct contact with the bodily fluids of someone who is sick and showing symptoms. To stop its spread, experts say, the sick should be isolated and not have any contact with the healthy. Overcrowded treatment centers, a reluctance on the part of sick people to seek medical care and burial practices that involve touching the dead have helped fuel the disease's spread in West Africa.

With at least 2,473 people sickened, this outbreak now has more recorded cases than in the previous two dozen outbreaks combined.

Several counties and districts in Sierra Leone and Liberia have been cordoned off, and there are concerns this is slowing the supply of food and other goods to these areas. The World Food Program is preparing to feed 1 million people affected by such travel restrictions.

Several airlines have also suspended flights to the affected countries, despite the World Health Organization's advice that Ebola is unlikely to spread through air travel. Guinea's president, Alpha Conde, met airline representatives and foreign diplomats on Wednesday to reassure them that Guinea is screening passengers leaving the country for fever and other symptoms, in line with WHO recommendations.

The Associated Press

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Ebola

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