Kenya's president defends planned U.S.-backed Ebola quarantine facility
Kenyan President William Ruto defended a planned U.S.-backed Ebola quarantine facility at a military air base in central Kenya, saying it was part of a wider national preparedness plan and a long-running health partnership with Washington.
Last week, Kenya approved a U.S. request to establish a facility at a military air base in central Kenya for Americans who may have been exposed to Ebola.
Residents and local leaders in Nanyuki, near the base, held a protest on Monday against the planned facility, saying they feared it could expose the community to Ebola and questioning why Kenya should host a quarantine centre for U.S. citizens. The protest followed growing public criticism of the arrangement and legal action seeking to halt the project.
Speaking for the first time about the facility, Ruto said it was not unusual and was similar to others already established in Kenya. "The facility that is at Laikipia Air Base is not a facility different from all the other facilities that we have across Kenya," Ruto told reporters in northern Kenya late on Monday, urging Kenyans not to doubt the government's preparedness.
The Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda are battling the rare Bundibugyo strain of the Ebola virus in an outbreak that has so far killed 48 people and been declared a public health emergency of international concern by the WHO.
The outbreak is outpacing the global response, which got off to a late start.
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