Britain’s Ebola Screening is a Complete Joke Say Blacks as They Walk Straight Through Into the Green and Pleasant Land

Sven Longshanks
Daily Stormer
October 16, 2014

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Clive Patterson, a film maker working in Liberia on an Ebola documentary was not stopped so went to speak to medical staff himself and said: ‘I could have walked straight through.’

Asking potential Eboloids whether they feel like having their temperature taken is not going to protect Britain from Ebola.

The only way to do that is to shut down all flights from West Africa and prevent anyone from there setting foot in the country.

Even the most die-hard government supporters are now saying this along with some of the Politicians themselves.

Daily Mail:

Britain’s Ebola screening plans descended into chaos on its first day today after people flying to the UK from high risk countries revealed the checks are not compulsory.

Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt said airline passengers from West Africa must be checked for symptoms ‘to make our country safe’ and warned the epidemic could be as deadly as Aids.

He also warned Britain should expect up to ten cases by Christmas as screening of passengers from Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea, where 4,000 have died from Ebola, started at Heathrow.

But travellers at Terminal One this morning said the system is a ‘complete joke’ because they were either not checked at all, told it was optional or had to seek out medical staff themselves.

After the complaints the Department of Health confirmed that screening travellers at major entry points into UK is not mandatory unless they ‘show symptoms of the virus’.

Public Health England, which is carrying out the checks, said today that the six months of planned screening will cost £9million.

Sorious Samura who flew in from Liberia this morning, said he had decided to volunteer to be screened and was not made to take the questionnaire and temperature check.

The documentary maker had been making a film about the deadly virus in Liberia and arrived at the London hub this morning from a connecting flight from Brussels.

And he said checks and precautions were more strict in the west African state than those he met at Britain’s borders.

He said: ‘It was disappointing. I think in a situation like this, given the fear that is being spread, I would expect a mandatory screening.

‘I was told it is up to you if you want to be screened or not.

‘Having seen it first hand I think it was a bit lax here. To be honest it was a complete joke’.

Clive Patterson, 32, who was working on a documentary on the virus with Mr Samura, also volunteered to be screened.

He said: ‘We have been working, interviewing, people who are in the thick of it.

‘If you are going to make the effort and take this measure, you might as well make it compulsory.

‘I could have Ebola and I could have walked straight through.’

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The non-compulsory questionnaire that is supposed to keep Britain safe from Ebola.