US sends 700 soldiers to Liberia to fight Ebola
Updated: 2014-10-01 22:56
(Xinhua)
|
|||||||||
A general view of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia September 30, 2014. US health officials said on Tuesday the first patient infected with the deadly Ebola virus had been diagnosed in the country after flying from Liberia to Texas, in a new sign of how the outbreak ravaging West Africa can spread globally. [Photo/Agencies] |
WASHINGTON - US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel has authorized the deployment of 700 soldiers to Liberia to help with the fight against the Ebola epidemic there, the Defense Department said in a statement Wednesday.
The troops will be deployed in late October to supervise the construction of Ebola treatment units, conduct site surveys and provide engineering expertise in an area with a range of infrastructure repair needs, said the department.
Last week, 15 construction-specialty sailors from the US Army arrived in Monrovia, the capital of Liberia, to offer engineering support to the Operation United Assistance, conducting site surveys for future hospitals, and supply storage and training facilities for health care workers.
The deployments are part of a whole-of-government response to the Ebola outbreak, according to the statement.
About 195 Defense Department personnel are now in west Africa, and over the last weekend the equipment for a 25-bed hospital and two mobile labs arrived in Monrovia.
The hospital will be in operation around mid-October, the statement said, adding that US military personnel are not and will not be providing direct care to Ebola patients.
- Xinjiang publishes anti-terror brochures
- Security pact sealed with Afghanistan
- President Xi encourages international cultural exchanges
- Premier Li: China willing to help Afghan infrastructure
- Chinese FM: China, Asia-Pacific become community of shared destiny
- Foreign minister remarks on possibility of China-Japan summit
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
HK extends injunction against protests |
Growth pangs |
Decoding China cyber-society |
Safeguarding foreigners' rights |
Getting my first hair cut in Ningbo |
The ancient army that's still growing |
Today's Top News
VW defends safety of recalled New Sagitar
Former premier makes Hurun philanthropists list
Xinjiang publishes anti-terror brochures
SOHO endows $10m to Yale
Cook and Ma talk about partnership
Language a barrier to healthcare for Asian Americans
China businesses need innovation: VC
Security pact sealed with Afghanistan
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |