Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone announced today an isolation zone sealing off the epicentre of the world's worst-ever Ebola outbreak, where the three countries meet.
"We have agreed to take important and extraordinary actions at the inter-country level to focus on cross-border regions that have more than 70 percent of the epidemic," said Hadja Saran Darab, the secretary-general of the Mano River Union bloc grouping the West African nations.
"These areas will be isolated by police and military. The people in these areas being isolated will be provided with material support," Darab added.
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"The health care services in these zones will be strengthened for treatment, testing and contact tracing to be done effectively.
"Burials will be done in accordance with national health regulations. We agreed to provide our health personnel with incentives, treatment and protection so they could come back to work."
Darab did not outline the exact area to be part of the isolation zone, but the epicentre of the outbreak spreads from Kenema in eastern Sierra Leone to Macenta in southern Guinea, almost 300 kilometres (185 miles) away.