The Presidency on
Sunday said no member of President Goodluck Jonathan’s delegation to the United
States for the African/American Leaders Summit was screened for exposure to the
dreaded Ebola virus on arrival at Washington DC.
Jonathan and some
top government officials arrived the US on Sunday for the summit billed for
Monday (today).
Some members of the
President’s advanced team had arrived the US on Friday and Saturday.
President Barack
Obama was quoted on Friday as saying that some African participants attending
the summit would be screened for exposure to the dreaded virus which is
currently ravaging some West African countries.
Obama explained
that the action would be taken to protect the US from the outbreak of the
disease.
He said, “Folks who
are from these countries that have even a marginal risk, or an infinitesimal
risk of having been exposed in some fashion, we’re making sure we’re doing
screening.”
A Liberian, Patrick
Sawyer, had died in a Lagos hospital of the dreaded virus.
All those who had
contacts with the deceased whose remains had since been cremated were being
observed by the Federal Government.
Although no other
case of the virus has so far been established in Nigeria, Obama’s statement
fuelled speculations that Jonathan and members of his entourage might be
subjected to screening before they could be allowed into the country.
But shortly after
arriving the US, Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Dr.
Reuben Abati, disclosed on his Twitter
handle that no member of the President’s entourage was screened.
“Nobody took any
Ebola test, please,” the presidential spokesman wrote in a response to a
question raised by one Okunola Bukky.
Abati had earlier twitted some of the
photographs of the President taken on his arrival at the airport while being
received by top US and Nigerian government officials.
Based on the
photographs, Bukky asked Abati, “please, confirm to us if the entourage took
Ebola test…”
Independent
investigation also showed that none of the members of the President’s advance
team who arrived in the US on Friday and Saturday was screened of the virus.
“Why will we be
screened? How? By who? There is nothing like that. At least, nobody screened
me,” a member of the President’s advance team who arrived in the US on Saturday
told our correspondent on Sunday.
Two African leaders
had already said that they would not attend the meeting because of the outbreak
of the Ebola disease in their countries.
The leaders are the
presidents of Liberia and Sierra Leone, Mrs. Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf and Ernest
BaiKoroma, respectively.
Lie, he was screened because all other members of his entourage were screened . America , do not descriminate like Africans.
ReplyDelete