Ebola: UK cancels resumption of direct flights to Sierra Leone

Department of Transport cites deteriorating public health for revoking
Gambia Bird’s licence to fly to Ebola-hit country

*         

*        The Guardian <http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian> , Monday 13
October 2014 15.10 BST 

Cuban health workers unload medical supplies at Freetown's airport to help
fight Ebola in Sierra Leone. Charities say the UK flight decision closes a
vital humanitarian corrider to the country. Photograph: Florian
Plaucheur/AFP/Getty Images 

The first direct flights to resume from the UK to Sierra Leone have been
cancelled after the British government revoked Gambia Bird’s recently
granted permit because of fears over Ebola.

The Department of Transport cited the deteriorating public health situation
for the revocation when it notified the German-owned airline on Friday
evening.

The airline said it would appeal against the decision, especially as its
licence was only granted on 26 September.

The decision closed what charities and non-governmental organisations (NGOs)
said was a vital humanitarian corridor to Sierra Leone, which is struggling
to cope with the Ebola outbreak.

Médecins sans Frontières, the charity on the frontline of the Ebola outbreak
since the beginning, criticised the decision. It said if the government was
going to stop commercial airlines flying to the region it would have to put
in place state alternatives.

“It’s extremely difficult to get much-needed staff into the region and at a
time that we need more people on the ground than ever, this is very
unhelpful,” said a spokeswoman.

Freight company Redcoat said that among the cargo booked for Friday was
1,000 personal protective equipment kits including overalls, masks and
goggles for doctors and nurses.

A spokesman for Gambia Bird’s official agent in the UK, McPhillips Travel,
said there were about 60 passengers on the first flight which was scheduled
to leave Gatwick on Friday. The plane also had about 4 tonnes of
humanitarian aid.

“We think it is an overreaction,” Ben Mortimer said. “The situation was bad
on 26 September. It is worse now, but not much.

“We already had protocols in place as part of the permit in which they had
the names and addresses of all passengers in the event they needed to trace
people. This is much better than trying to screen people who are coming into
the country from Europe or Morocco on an indirect route,” he said.

Gambia Bird, along with British Airways and Air France, stopped services to
and from Sierra Leone in August but the German-owned airline announced it
was resuming flights because of the damage being caused by the lack of
access.

Only one European airline, Brussels Airlines, has maintained its operations,
allowing travel for doctors, nurses and other workers.

In a statement issued to its passengers and commercial partners, McPhillips
Travel said the decision “punishes Sierra Leone and west Africa in general”.

It said “extremely stringent” passenger screening procedures had been put in
place at Lunghi airport in the capital, Freetown, and that Public Health
England was consulted throughout the planning process and “was satisfied
that measures being taken were adequately robust”.

Direct flights would provide easier, more cost-effective access for
humanitarian aid in the form of NGO volunteers, medical professionals and
supplies to combat Ebola, it said.

A spokesman for the Department of Transport said the inconvenience to
passengers was unfortunate but its priority was tackling the spread of Ebola
and protecting the British public from the disease.

It said it would “continue to explore options which could assist travel by
NGO workers to affected areas”.

 

 

EM

On the 49th Parallel          

                 Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in
anarchy"
                    Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni
katika machafuko"

 

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