About
850 Nigerian soldiers on peacekeeping mission in Liberia are to be
quarantined for 28 days when they return to the country in March 2015.
There are two battalions of the Nigerian Army in Liberia.
A
source said on Sunday that the Army personnel were scheduled to return
to the country in January but that their arrival would be delayed till
March 2015.
According to the source, when they
arrive in the country in March 2015, they will be quarantined in
Gwagwalada, Abuja for 28 days before being allowed to go to their
formations.
It was gathered that the soldiers returning from a
similar mission in Sudan were not likely to be quarantined because Sudan
had not recorded any Ebola case.
The source said that the
Army authorities decided to ensure a painstaking observation of soldiers
returning from Ebola infested countries because of the danger posed by
the disease.
The
Head of the Nigerian Army Medical Corps, Major-General Obashina
Ogunbiyi, had said during a meeting of infectious diseases experts under
the aegis of the Ebola Treatment Research Group in Abuja on Thursday
that some Nigerian soldiers had been quarantined in Liberia following
the death of a Sudanese who went to their camp to pray with them.
The Sudanese was said to have died two days after the prayer session and was believed to have died of the EVD.
Also,
the Defence Headquarters said in a tweet on its twitter handle on
Friday that “all necessary steps are being taken to ensure that no
Nigerian soldier is infected with the deadly virus while serving in
Liberia.”
The DHQ stated further in another tweet that the
troops were quarantined for “preventive purposes and medical observation
following the case of a Sudanese, a UN employee who was reported to
have manifested … (the EVD).”
It was added that while no Nigerian soldier had shown symptoms of the disease, they were still confined to their camp.
Credit: Fidelis Soriwei/ Friday Olokor/PunchNews
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