Public  tertiary institutions across Ghana will reopen later than expected for  the commencement of the new academic year due to the Ebola scare, Deputy  Minister of Education Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa said here on Tuesday.
Speaking on an Accra-based radio station,  Ablakwa said that the decision was to ensure effective virus screening  was in place before foreign students travelling from affected West  African countries, including Nigeria, Liberia and Sierra Leone, arrived  in the country.
He said: “It is very likely that reopening of  all tertiary institutions will be postponed while the inter-ministerial  task force put in place measures to avert any such case.
“We looked at the possibility of students  coming from the affected countries in the sub-region and how we can put  in place screening mechanisms to ensure that these students have not  contracted the deadly Ebola virus and that they are not coming to spread  the virus on our campuses.”
He said the closure would continue until surveillance and screening at entry border points had been strengthened.
The deputy minister also hinted that the  Ghanaian government was going to put a freeze on international  conferences and public gatherings.
He assured the public that the  inter-ministerial committee set up by the government and health  institutions were ready and on high alert to handle any outbreak and  prevent the spread of the deadly virus.
The Ebola virus has so far claimed more than  1,000 lives, with about 1,800 people infected in Liberia, Guinea, Sierra  Leone and Nigeria since the outbreak of the disease in February.
The current outbreak, the worst ever, has  spread to other countries such as Nigeria in recent months and is  transmitted among humans through bodily fluids.
In Ghana, a total of 37 suspected cases have been evaluated and all have proven negative.

 
 
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