The UN Security Council on Thursday unanimously adopted a resolution declaring the Ebola outbreak in West Africa “a threat to international peace and security.”
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, who oversaw the council’s meeting on the virus outbreak, called on countries to provide urgent aid and resources to contain and treat the disease. “Ebola matters to us all,” he said. “We cannot afford delays. The penalty for inaction is high. We need to race ahead of the outbreak and then turn and face it with all of our energy and strength.”
Resolution 2177 asked countries to “provide urgent assistance, including deployable medical capabilities such as field hospitals” and to provide “support capabilities for airlift.”
“Instead of isolating the affected countries, we call for flooding them — flooding them with resources,” said U.S. Ambassador to the UN Samantha Power.
This is only the third resolution implemented by the council that addresses a public health crisis. The 15-member body adopted measures to address the HIV/AIDS epidemic in 2000 and 2011.
The council also urged nations with ties to the affected countries “to lift general travel and border restrictions, imposed as a result of the Ebola outbreak,” as that would “contribute to the further isolation of the affected countries and undermine their efforts to respond.”
During the past six months, the Ebola virus has killed more than 2,400 people and affected more than 4,000 individuals, particularly in Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Nigeria and Senegal. The secretary-general called this the worst Ebola outbreak on record and said that the number of Ebola infections were doubling every three weeks.
“The gravity and scale of the situation now require a level of international action unprecedented for a health emergency,” Ban said.









