Samantha Power will visit Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea "to draw attention to the need for increased support for the international response," said a statement released late yesterday by the US mission.
A spokesman said Power had already departed and was set to land in the capital of Guinea, Conakry, today. Earlier yesterday, the ambassador tweeted a photo of herself with Guinea's ambassador to the United Nations.
Power has been vocal about the need for a stronger global response to Ebola's devastating spread. In a speech a week ago, she even praised Cuba, a country that has been under a US embargo for decades, for having sent 165 doctors to Sierra Leone.
"The international community isn't just losing the race to Ebola. We are getting lapped," she said in the speech. The UN repeatedly has expressed concern as airlines and shipping companies cut service to the three most affected countries, making it difficult to deliver aid workers and supplies and causing food prices to soar. Aid workers with the UN and elsewhere also have worried openly about the challenges of attracting trained volunteers to come and help out.
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The statement did not say whether Power would meet with survivors of the outbreak.
Power also will visit Ghana, the headquarters for the UN's Ebola mission, and Belgium.
The ambassador's trip was announced shortly after new quarantine policies were put into effect in New York as authorities reacted to the infection of a doctor who had been treating Ebola patients in Guinea. The governors of New York, New Jersey and Illinois on Friday declared mandatory 21-day quarantines for arriving travellers who have had contact with Ebola patients in West Africa.