Liberia, one of the three West African
countries worst hit by Ebola, could be free of the virus by the end of next
month after success in curbing transmission, the government said on Thursday.
"There
are 10 confirmed Ebola cases as of the 12th of January 2015 in the whole of the
country," Deputy Health Minister Tolbert Nyenswah, who heads Liberia's
Ebola taskforce, said.
“My
projection is that, if we do everything possible, we can reach zero by the end
of the February."
Liberia
said this week that only two of the country's 15 counties still had Ebola
cases.
The
worst epidemic of the virus on record has killed more than 8,400 people and
infected some 21,200 in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea since it was detected
in March, according to WHO figures.
More
than 3,500 of the dead were from Liberia.
An
explosion in infection in the capital Monrovia in August caused international
alarm, which grew after a Liberian citizen, Thomas Duncan, carried the
infection to the United States the following month.
However,
a massive international response -- including the deployment of hundreds of
U.S. troops -- plus a public awareness campaign helped and infection rates have
steeply declined.
Nyenswah
said the hotspot for Ebola transmission was now Grande Cape Mount, near the
border with Sierra Leone.
Progress
has also been made in Sierra Leone - which has recorded the highest number of
cases - and Guinea.
The WHO said on Wednesday that the three countries had
recorded their lowest weekly number of new cases for months.reuters
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