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Guinea Confirms 2 New Ebola Cases, 3 Probable in Southeast
Release date: Guinea Confirms 2 New Ebola Cases, 3 Probable in Southeast
Two bodies tested positive for Ebola in Guinea, the government said Thursday, months after the outbreak was declared over in the West African country and hours after Sierra Leoneannounced the end of the recent flare-up of the virus there.
The cases emerged from the same family out of Koropara, in the N'Zerekore prefecture, about 1,000 kilometers (620 miles) southeast of Guinea's capital, Conakry, said Ibrahima Sylla, a spokesman for the national coordination for the fight against Ebola. Sylla said there are three other probable cases, and health authorities are taking appropriate measures to contain the spread.
An emergency meeting will be held Friday with the Ministry of Health, said Dr. Sakoba Keita, the national coordinator of the fight against Ebola.
Earlier Thursday, the deputy director general of the N'Zerekore Regional Hospital, Dr. Zoba Guilavogui, said a man and woman from the same family died of an illness like Ebola, but tests were pending.
Guinea was declared free from Ebola on Dec. 29. It would be celebrating the end of its 90-day heightened surveillance period at the end of March.
The deadliest Ebola outbreak in history has killed more than 11,300 people, mostly in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea.
The World Health Organization declared the outbreak over Jan. 14 when Liberia became the last of the three countries to have ended transmissions. The next day, however, a corpse tested positive for Ebola in Sierra Leone, which saw a flare-up of another case.
WHO and Sierra Leone's Ministry of Health and Sanitation announced the end of that Ebola flare-up Thursday. The declaration came 42 days — two 21-day incubation cycles of the virus — since the last confirmed Ebola patient tested negative for a second time.
Despite gains, experts warn flare-ups are likely.
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AP writer Clarence Roy-Macaulay contributed to this report.