Ebola may hit China
China is "vulnerable" to the deadly Ebola outbreak due to the soaring number of Chinese working in Africa and poor infection control at home, a co-discoverer of the virus warned yesterday.
Belgian microbiologist Peter Piot also said experience with other viral outbreaks showed that airport screening was largely ineffective, and repeated his earlier criticism of the World Health Organisation's initially "slow" response to the crisis.
China is Africa's largest trading partner and Beijing's diplomatic footprint across the continent has expanded hugely in recent years as it seeks resources to drive the world's number-two economy.
"Thousands and thousands of Chinese workers and people are in Africa now," Piot told an Ebola-focused seminar in Tokyo.
"So it is not impossible that one of them will go (back) to China. I am more concerned about that than about Africans going to China."
The quality of care at Chinese public hospitals was another concern, he added.
"I don't think you can really stop people from travelling, so these patients will show up in any country in the world, but China I thought is quite vulnerable," Piot said.
Responding to questions earlier this week about what China was doing to prevent an epidemic at home, foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said: "We have enhanced the screening of body temperatures of those entering China and made epidemic prevention preparations.
"So far, owing to our effective work, no suspected case has been reported in China. But we will remain on high alert and will never let down our guard."
The Ebola outbreak ravaging west Africa has claimed 4,922 lives, according to the latest WHO update, with the vast majority of deaths in Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone.
Piot said that toll was more than three times the number of people who have died from Ebola over the past four decades.
The scientist, who co-discovered the virus in 1976 in Zaire, now known as the Democratic Republic of the Congo, called on countries to focus on containing the outbreak in west Africa, rather than largely-ineffective airport screening.
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