European Council President Herman Van Rompuy says EU leaders have agreed to boost funding to tackle Ebola in West Africa to one billion euros. There had been criticism that the wealthy Europeans were not doing more, reports GHN based on DW.
Rompuy tweeted on Friday that EU leaders on day two of their summit in Brussels had decided that the block would increase its anti-Ebola funding for West Africa from nearly 600 million euros to one billion ($1.26 billion).
His announcement coincided with two new cases -- in Mali and New York -- and a warning from the UN's World Food Program (WFP) that the epidemic could turn into a food crisis in the nations affected -- Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone.
The WFP said it had delivered more than 13,000 tons of food to 778,000 people in the three countries, but donors had provided only half of the funds required.
Mali's health ministry confirmed the vast former French colony's first case, saying a 2-year-old girl who had arrived from neighboring Guinea with relatives had tested positive for Ebola.
She had been placed in isolation in a clinic in the city of Kayes, which lies about 500 kilometers from Mali's capital Bamako. The relatives were in quarantine.
The governor of Kaye, Salif Traoré, closed all city schools on Friday and called on residents to strictly observe hygiene recommendations. Two other West Africa nations, Nigeria and Senegal, recently declared similar limited outbreaks to be ended.
Mali, where French troops intervenied in 2013 during uprisings by militant Islamists and Tuareg rebels, has a meager health system. It has only one clinic bed for every 10,000 citizens, and only one doctor for every 12,500 Malians.
The UN's Geneva-based World Health Organization (WHO) said it would send four more of its experts to join three who have already been evaluating Mali's defenses.
WHO spokeswoman said Malian authorities were monitoring 43 people, including 10 health workers, who had been in contact with the girl.