Wednesday 27 August 2014

Jonathan Condemns Discrimination Against Nigerians Over Ebola

President Goodluck Jonathan has condemned the stigmatisation of
Nigerians by some countries over recent cases of the Ebola Virus
Disease.

At a meeting on Wednesday with a Special Envoy of the United Nations
Secretary-General, Mr David Navarro, President Jonathan particularly
denounced discriminatory actions such as that which forced Nigeria's
team to the Youth Olympics in China to abandon its participation.

President Jonathan stressed that there was no justification for such
stigmatisation of Nigerians since the Ebola Virus Disease had been
effectively contained and never attained epidemic levels.

He called for the cessation of discriminatory actions against
Nigerians over the virus and urged the UN Secretary General, Mr Ban
Ki-moon, to support the call.

Responding to the Secretary General's commendation of Nigeria's
management of the threat of Ebola, President Jonathan commended the
efforts of the Federal Ministry of Health, the Lagos State Government
and all Nigerians for the success achieved so far in containing the
virus and avoiding a national epidemic.

"All hands have been on deck to contain the virus here. I commend my
team and the Lagos State government. We have been able to set politics
aside and work in unison to deal with a national threat.

"All other Nigerians have played a part too by complying with the
directives and advice we have issued to stop the virus from spreading
any further. The success we have had is a testimony to what we can
achieve as people if we set aside our differences and work together,"
he told Mr Navarro.

Exemplary Fashion

The President assured the Special Envoy that in spite of the seeming
success of its containment measures, the Federal Government and its
agencies would remain vigilant to guard against further cases of
Ebola.

"We will continue to monitor the situation and we will also support
other affected African countries as much as we can because we cannot
be completely safe from the virus as long as it continues to ravage
some countries in our sub-region and continent. We will continue to
work with the international community to curb the outbreak in other
countries," President Jonathan pledged.

Mr Navarro, who had visited Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone, the
countries worst hit by Ebola before coming to Nigeria, told the
President that he had come, on the instruction of the UN
Secretary-General, to applaud Nigeria's successful containment of the
virus.

"The Secretary-General asked me to come here too, not because you have
an Ebola problem, but because you have tackled it in an exemplary
fashion.

"Your personal leadership on the matter has been key. There may still
be some work to be done before the virus is completely cleared out
from here, but other countries can learn from your fine example," Mr
Navarro told the President.

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