Daily Stormer
April 3, 2014
Any other race would run a mile if they heard there was an outbreak of Ebola somewhere. In fact they are, African Negroes are running as fast as they can to get out of the infected area, while White folks are deliberately flying into the country to try and fight the outbreak.
No other race but the White one is so charitable that they would risk their lives to save a people that hate them like this. I just hope none of the fleeing Negroes make their way into Europe. The correct response to this should be to secure all borders into Europe and shoot any potential carriers on sight. Fat chance of that happening.
From Daily Mail:
A medic has spoken of the horrific scenes witnessed by emergency doctors and nurses in the fight against the deadly Ebola outbreak in Guinea.
Naoufel Dridi, who works with humanitarian charity Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), described the suffering by patients struck down by the tropical virus, and the difficulties facing aid workers as they attempt to treat those suffering.
French Mr Dridi, 41, has been helping coordinate the charity’s relief work in the West African country and said that in his 13 years working with MSF he had never had to cope with the number of deaths in such a short space of time.
The number of suspected cases in Guinea has now reached 122, and at least 80 people are believed to have died.
‘You can be helping somebody by getting them a juice, or a glass of cold water, or whatever he wants because you know really he has very little chance to survive, and then less than an hour later he is dead,’ Mr Dridi told the Daily Telegraph.
‘Then when you are putting his body in the bag, another one behind you has died. Then another one.’
Ebola is passed onto humans from animals – especially fruit bats – and often breaks out near rainforests in central and western Africa.
Patients who develop the severe acute viral are often suddenly subjected to fever, muscle pain, headaches and sore throats, followed by vomiting, diarrhoea, rashes, impaired kidney and liver function.
In some cases sufferers experience both internal and external bleeding, and the highly contagious, and painful illness, can be passed on to humans through contact with the bodies of people killed by the virus.
There is no cure for the virus, and no vaccine which can protect against it.
The Ebola outbreak is the first of its kind in West Africa in two decades, and the first ever in Guinea.
Other West African countries, including neighbouring Sierra Leone and Libera where suspected cases have also been detected – are now scrambling to bring the outbreak under control, with many of them imposing health and travel restrictions.
Morocco has imposed strict controls to stop the disease spreading into the country, and Saudi Arabia’s health ministry has recommended that its government stop issuing visas to Muslim pilgims from Guinea and Liberia from visiting its holy sites.
Mr Dridi, who lives in Geneva, Switzerland, said that many local doctors and nurses did not initially know how serious the virus was, as it is the first time Guinea has been affected by it.
MSF staff have been wearing full protective clothing to help prevent the spread of disease and have made it clear to local medics that there are no drugs to treat the virus.