At least 17 ebola patients have fled a quarantine centre in Liberia after it was attacked by armed men.The sufferers fled after looters broke into the clinic in a Monrovia slum, stealing blood-stained matresses and sheets, and claiming ebola was a hoax. 

Seventeen ebola sufferers flee a clinic raided by looters who steal blood-stained sheets - sparking fears the virus will spread.




17:33, UK,
      














"They broke down the doors and looted the place. The patients all fled," Rebecca Wesseh, who witnessed the attack, told AFP news agency.
A mob surrounds the isolation unit in West Point, Monrovia
George Williams, head of the Health Workers Association of Liberia, said the unit housed 29 patients receiving preliminary treatment before being taken to hospital.
It is understood at least 17 of the 29 are at large.
Health officials say they fear the looting attack at the unit in West Point will spread ebola infections in Monrovia.
The West Point neighbourhood is home to an estimated 60,000 to 100,000 poor Liberians.
Ms Wesseh said she heard the raiders shouting that President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf "is broke", adding: "She wants money. There's no ebola" in Liberia.
Video: 1970s Ebola Survivor Speaks Out
Residents were also angry that patients were brought from other parts of the capital to the holding centre, witnesses said.
Most of the raiders were young men and were armed with clubs. They broke into the isolation unit set up in a high school, Ms Wesseh said. Nurses also fled the attack.
The looting of the centre came as Kenya closed its borders to travellers from Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone because of fears about the spread of ebola.
Video: Travelling Through Ebola Epicentre
National carrier Kenya Airways said it was suspending its flights to Monrovia and Freetown from Wednesday.
At least 1,145 people have died across West Africa this year because of the world's worst-ever outbreak of the virus. 
Medical charity Doctors Without Borders, known by its French acronym MSF, on Friday warned ebola was spreading faster than authorities could handle.
Video: The Challenges Of Treating Ebola
The charity said it could take six months to bring under control.
Ebola is spread by contact with an infected person's bodily fluids, such as sweat and blood, and no cure or vaccine is currently available.
The last days of a victim's life can be grim, with agonising muscular pain, vomiting, diarrhoea and catastrophic haemorrhaging as vital organs break down.

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