Saudi Arabia has
banned Muslims from the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda from making the
pilgrimage to the holy city of Mecca this year because of cholera and Ebola
epidemics in the region, a Congolese religious leader said Thursday. “The Muslims living in DR Congo and even those in Uganda won’t
participate in the pilgrimage to Mecca this year,” the head of DR Congo’s
Islamic community, Cheik Abdallah Mangala, told AFP.
He said he thought the Saudi government had “made the decision to
avoid any contamination from the Ebola and cholera viruses,” which have taken a
heavy toll on the region in recent months.
Pilgrims have already begun to arrive in Saudi Arabia for the
pilgrimage, the world’s largest annual gathering, which peaks around October 25
this year with more than one million Muslims expected.
DR Congo has been battling an outbreak of cholera, a contagious
intestinal infection, for over a year, and of Ebola, one of the world’s most
virulent diseases, since mid-August.
According to the World Health Organisation, which has not imposed
any travel restrictions on the country, more than 20,000 people in DR Congo
were infected with cholera in 2012, with a mortality rate of two percent.
Leodegar Bazira, the WHO official in DR Congo, said the
organisation had recorded 74 Ebola cases since August, 36 of them deadly,
putting the mortality rate at 50 percent. But he added that the disease was now
under control and confined to the northeastern town of Isiro.
In Uganda, Ebola has killed 17 people since July, but officials
announced earlier this month that the disease had been brought under control
and urged all countries to lift travel restrictions on Uganda.
To date, there is no treatment nor vaccine for Ebola, a rare
haemorrhagic disease that kills between 25 percent and 90 percent of patients,
depending on the strain of the virus. It is named after a small river in DR
Congo.
Cholera, which is caused by ingestion of contaminated food or
water, can strike swiftly, causing intense diarrhoea, vomiting and nausea that
lead to severe dehydration
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