We were under pressure to release victim – Hospital
By Sola Ogundipe, Olasunkanmi Akoni, Lawani Mikairu, Daniel Eteghe & Gabriel Olawale
Lagos—Arik Air yesterday said it had suspended flight operations to
Liberia and Sierra Leone following the death last week, of a Liberian,
Mr. Patrick Sawyer, of the dreaded Ebola disease,
even as it advised that all inbound flights into Nigeria from any of
the Ebola affected countries be immediately suspended by the Federal
Government.
Sawyer flew into Nigeria onboard Asky Airline to attend an ECOWAS conference in Calabar, Cross River State.
This came as First Consultants Medical Centre Ltd, Obalende, Lagos, the
hospital where the first Ebola victim in Nigeria died, said it was
under serious pressure to release the victim.
Confirming the
suspension of the flights yesterday, Arik Air General Manager, Public
Relations, Mr Ola Adebanji said “As a result of the first Ebola virus
death officially confirmed in Lagos, and involving a Liberian national
who flew on a foreign (non-Nigerian) based airline from Monrovia via
Lome (Togo) into the city last week, Arik Air will be suspending
operations into Monrovia (Liberia) and Freetown (Sierra Leone) effective
July 28, 2014.”
“The suspension will be in force until further
notice. This decision is a pre-cautionary measure aimed at safeguarding
the precious lives of Nigerians. Arik Air is taking this important
measure as a concerned corporate citizen bearing interest of Nigerians
at heart.“
According to him, the airline acknowledged steps the
Federal Government of Nigeria was currently taking to prevent the
spread of the deadly Ebola virus, saying “however, we feel compelled to
take the decision to immediately suspend services into the two Ebola
affected countries due to our interest in the well being of Nigerians.”
He explained that at the early stages of the development across West
Africa, the Gambian government took the proactive decision to stop
airlines, including Arik Air, from bringing inbound passengers from
Monrovia, Conakry, Guinea, and Freetown into Banjul.
Adebanji
added “Hence, in line with the actions taken by the Gambian Government,
we trust, and are confident, that the Federal Government of Nigeria
shall take all steps necessary to control and curtail the spread of the
virus. We humbly suggest that as a first step, all inbound flights into
Nigeria, originating from any of the Ebola-affected countries, be
immediately suspended.”
Meanwhile, First Consultants Medical
Centre Ltd, Obalende, Lagos, the hospital where the first Ebola victim
in Nigeria died, has spoken out on the circumstances surrounding the
incident.
In a statement by the hospital’s Chief Consultant/ Medical
Director, Dr B.N. Ohiaeri and the Senior Consultant Physician and
Endocrinologist, Dr. A.S. Adadevoh, it said the hospital was under
pressure to release the victim.
According to the statement, “He
was fully conscious and gave his clinical history and told us he was a
senior diplomat from Liberia. We refused to let him out of the hospital
in spite of intense pressure as we were told he was a senior ECOWAS
official who had an important role to play at the ECOWAS convention in
Calabar. The initial test result from the Lagos University Teaching
Hospital laboratory indicated a signal of possible Ebola Virus Disease,
but required confirmation.
“We then took the further step of
reaching out to senior officials in the office of the Secretary of
Health of the United States of America, who promptly assisted us with
contacts at the Centre for Disease Control and World Health Organisation
regional laboratory centre in Senegal. Jointly working with the state,
Federal agencies and international agencies, we were able to obtain
confirmation of Ebola Virus Disease (Zaire strain). The gentleman
subsequently died on Friday at 6.50am (25th July, 2014).”
Following the death of the patient, the duo said there was “orderly
temporary shutdown of the hospital with immediate evacuation of in-house
patients. This was followed by appropriate professional removal of the
body and its incineration under WHO guidelines witnessed by all
appropriate agencies,” noting that the reopening of the hospital would
also be in accordance with WHO guidelines.
The statement added
that in keeping with World Health Organisation guideline, the hospital
had been shut down briefly for full decontamination.
Meanwhile,
a cross section of Lagos residents has urged the state and federal
governments to spread their dragnet nationwide to ensure that all the
co- passengers aboard the Asky aircraft that brought the victim to
Nigeria are quickly located and screened for the virus.
Speaking to Vanguard at the departure wing of the Murtala Mohammed
International Airport in Lagos, a middle-aged man, who identified
himself as Olukayode, said it was not good enough for the co-passengers
to have been allowed to go away without ensuring their health had not
been compromised.
Another passenger who pleaded anonymity said
screening of people should have been adopted earlier to stop the spread
of the disease.
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