Deforestation, "Development" Connected to Spread of Ebola in

Deforestation, "Development" Connected to Spread of Ebola in

Postby Oscar » Mon Nov 24, 2014 9:35 pm

Deforestation, "Development" Connected to Spread of Ebola in West Africa

[ http://truth-out.org/news/item/27504-de ... st-africa# ]

Monday, 24 November 2014 10:09 By Jeff Conant, Truthout | Interview

It is clear that the spread of Ebola in West Africa is directly linked to the region's deep poverty: Out of 187 countries on the United Nations' Human Development Index, Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone rank 175th, 179th and 183rd, respectively. But, while it is easy to recognize the links between poverty and the spread of the virus, there has been little focus on the root causes of the region's impoverishment itself.

Along with the world's deepest poverty, West Africa is in the running for the region with the highest deforestation rate in the world. [ http://dailyindependentnig.com/2014/03/ ... ommission/ ]

Some researchers have drawn clear links between the outbreak of the disease and the resource exploitation that plagues the region. [ http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morn ... -pandemic/ ]

Earlier epidemics have followed a pattern similar to the current spread of Ebola: Almost invariably, they affect regions whose economies, ecosystems and public health systems have been decimated; poverty drives people deeper into the forests to look for food and fuel, where they come into contact with animals that act as "disease reservoirs" - hosts that carry the pathogen without manifesting symptoms; the situation is compounded by the inability of the public health system to respond. Consequently, the impoverished health system itself becomes the reservoir of infections, serving to further the spread of disease, and patients and health workers alike carry the infection to the general population.

Armed with this understanding, the Peoples' Health Movement argues that a broad response to Ebola requires understanding not only the pathology of the disease, but also the pathology of the global political and economic architecture that underlies it. [ http://www.phmovement.org/sites/www.phm ... ressed.pdf ]

I recently spoke with Silas Siakor, director of Sustainable Development Institute/Friends of the Earth Liberia, on the link between the Ebola epidemic and the ruthless exploitation of forest resources in the region. [ http://www.cental.org/index.php?option= ... 17&Itemid= ]

INTERVIEW:

[ http://truth-out.org/news/item/27504-de ... st-africa# ]
Oscar
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