An athlete
at the Commonwealth Games has revealed he was hospitalised and put into
isolation for four days while he was tested for the deadly Ebola virus.
Cyclist
Moses Sesay, from Sierra Leone in West Africa where hundreds are
reported to have died from the flesh-eating virus, was admitted to
hospital in Glasgow after feeling unwell and developing fever-like
symptoms.
However, he was later given the all-clear and on Thursday, July 31, 2014 competed in the road race time trial.
Last
night, the 32-year-old said he and other athletes were scared of
returning home because of Ebola and would try to remain in Britain until
their special three-month visas for the Games expired.
Mr Sesay,
who comes from the Rotifunk Moyamba area of Sierra Leone which has been
hit by the disease, said: ‘I was sick, I felt tired and listless. All
the doctors were in special suits to treat me – they dressed like I had
Ebola. I was very scared.’
Speaking to the Daily Mirror, he continued: ‘I was admitted for four days and they tested me for Ebola.
‘It came back negative but they did it again and this time sent it to London where it was also negative.’
The father of one, who competed in the Games on his 32nd birthday, finished last in his race.
He had
arrived in Glasgow among a team of two dozen competitors and officials
the week before the Games and felt unwell last Thursday, the day after
he attended the Opening Ceremony.
‘All of us
are scared about going back,’ he said. ‘We have a three-month visa in
our passports and if I have the opportunity, I will stay here until it
ends.
It
is scary over there. My mother is a medical nurse so she may have to
treat people. My wife is also doing work in the medical field.’
A West
African official last night denied a report that another member of the
team, believed to be Mr Sesay’s room mate in the village, had gone
missing or that others had been hospitalised.
Deadly:
Medics carry a young girl who has been in contact with people infected
with Ebola in Sierra Leone [Photo Credit: Sylvian Cherkaoul/Cosmos]
He said
that officials in Glasgow were in contact with the High Commission in
London over the timing of the team’s return and that they still planned
to take part in the Closing Ceremony on Sunday, August 3, 2014.
No special precautions had been taken inside the athlete’s village and they were sharing facilities with other teams, he added.
It is the
second Commonwealth Games that Mr Sesay, who trains in South Africa, has
attended having competed in Delhi, India, four years ago.
Officials stressed there had been no positive tests for Ebola in Scotland but refused to comment on negative tests.
Ebola is a severe, often fatal illness, that affects humans as well as primates, including monkeys, gorillas and chimpanzees.
The virus is transmitted through close contact with the blood, secretions, organs or other bodily fluids of infected animals
Once a person becomes infected, the disease can spread through contact with a sufferer’s blood, urine, saliva, stools and semen.
The Ebola virus is fatal in 90 per cent of cases and there is no vaccine and no known cure.
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