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Ebola: 15-year-old Liberian dies after country declared safe in September

More than 4,800 Liberians have died since the outbreak in December 2013

Rose Troup Buchanan
Tuesday 24 November 2015 06:57 EST
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Nurses carry a victim from Monrovia in January
Nurses carry a victim from Monrovia in January (AFP/Getty)

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A fifteen-year-old boy has become Liberia’s first Ebola victim since the country was triumphantly declared free of the disease for the second time in as many months.

Nathan Gbotoe tested positive for the deadly disease last week in a hospital in Paynesville, a district in the capital Monrovia. By Monday the teenager had succumbed to the illness.

Liberia was one of the worst affected by the latest Ebola outbreak: since December 2013 more than 4,800 people died after contracting the disease in a country that was ill-equipped to combat the huge number of infected.

On 9 May and 3 September experts declared the country Ebola-free, only to have the disease return with the death of a 17-year-old boy and girl in July.

Ebola can survive for months in survivors’ semen, eye fluid, breast milk and spinal fluid.

The return of the disease has surprised experts - and they seem unsure how long it will last or what the long-trm effects will be.

Gbotoe’s father and brother are also being treated for Ebola, officials confirmed.

“The fight against Ebola is not over yet, but we must not lose hope and must continue the practices we used to beat Ebola before. We can win this battle again with your participation and support of the communities,” the Liberian Health Ministry said in a statement.

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