The UN Security Council will convene for an emergency meeting Thursday to address the ongoing Ebola epidemic spreading across West Africa, according to the president of the 15-member body. This will be only the second time in history the council has met to address a public health crisis.
More than 4,000 cases of Ebola have been reported and 2,400 people have died in West Africa during the unprecedented outbreak. Liberia has been the hardest-hit country, along with Sierra Leone and Guinea. The only other time the UN Security Council has met about a public health crisis was its January 2000 response to the AIDS pandemic.
“It is crucial that Council members discuss the status of the epidemic, confer on a coordinated international response, and begin the process of marshaling our collective resources to stop the spread of the disease,” U.S. Ambassador Samantha Powers said on Monday. She told reporters at UN headquarters that she hopes the outcome of Thursday’s gathering will urge a much more urgent international response to the burgeoning need for qualified medical professionals, equipment, supplies and aid to the region.
“The situation on the ground is dire and is growing worse by the day,” Powers said.
“The trendlines in this crisis are grave, and without immediate international action we are facing the potential for a public health crisis that could claim lives on a scale far greater than current estimates, and set the countries of West Africa back a generation,” added Power. “This is a perilous crisis but one we can contain if the international community comes together to meet it head on.”
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon, Dr. Margaret Chan of the World Health Organization and Senior UN System Coordinator for Ebola Virus Disease David Nabarro will brief the council as well. Ambassadors from the affected countries will also ask the international community for increased aid and more expedient action.
For the month of September, the United States is president of the UN Security Council, which implements a month-long rotating presidency.
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation announced last week that it has pledged $50 million, the largest amount ever donated towards a humanitarian crisis, to fight the viral disease. The funds – $5 million has been given to WHO and another $5 million to UNICEF – would boost United Nations agencies and international organizations involved in containing and treating the virus.









