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LUANDA, March 31 (Xinhuanet) -- The Angolan
government has called for more overseas assistance to tackle an epidemic of the
deadly Marburg virus, which has claimed 119 lives out of the 127 cases
registered in the southwestern African country by Wednesday.
Angolan Deputy Health Minister Jose
Van-Dunem told Luanda-basedforeign diplomats that "Angola needs support from the
international community in logistics, human resources and transport to contain
this virus."
A similar appeal was made by Amilcar Tanouari of the
Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one of the few
laboratories equipped to monitor the outbreak of Marburg hemorrhagic fever in
the province of Uige, 150 km northeast of Luanda.
"The international community must help Angola," he
said, stressing that the most useful aid at the moment to embattled health
services was "disposable medical supplies to prevent transmission of the virus."
The World Health Organization and the Angolan
government are coordinating measures by foreign-backed medical teams to contain
the deadly virus in Uige.
The Marburg virus was first identified in 1967.
Several Africancountries including South Africa and Kenya have also experienced
the epidemic.
Three-quarters of the deaths in Angola have been
children underthe age of five, according to the WHO, but the virus has also
started to claim adult victims since it erupted in October in Uigeprovince and
began rapidly spreading in February. Enditem
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