Uganda confirms three new Ebola cases, bringing total to five
2 min readUganda said on Saturday that three new Ebola cases had been confirmed there, taking the total of confirmed cases to five.
The new cases include a Ugandan driver who transported the country’s first confirmed case as well as a health worker who was exposed to the virus while taking care of the same person, the Health Ministry said in a statement.
A Congolese woman was the third new case.
US bans entry
The United States on Friday temporarily banned the entry of lawful permanent residents who have been in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Uganda or South Sudan in the previous 21 days, citing concerns over Ebola.
US citizens, nationals and green card holders had been exempt from a 30-day Ebola ban, but the US CDC said on Friday that extending the ban to green card holders was necessary to stop the virus from entering the country.
“Applying this authority to lawful permanent residents for a limited period of time provides a balance between protecting public health and managing emergency response resources,” the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention said in a statement.
The World Health Organisation on Friday raised to “very high“ the risk of the rare Bundibugyo strain of Ebola turning into a national outbreak in the DRC and has declared the outbreak there and in Uganda an emergency of international concern.
The CDC first issued the order on Monday under Title 42 of the US public health law, which allows federal health authorities to prohibit migrants from entering the country to prevent the spread of contagious diseases.
Green card holders have historically been shielded from US entry restrictions.
The CDC’s COVID-era Title 42 order did not apply to them, nor did President Donald Trump’s various travel bans.
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