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Trump Orders U.S. Military to Set Up Ebola Quarantine Facilities in Kenya Within One Week
Trump Orders U.S. Military to Set Up Ebola Quarantine Facilities in Kenya Within One Week

America's Ebola Firewall: U.S. Military Has One Week to Build a Quarantine Base in Kenya

With the virus advancing and Americans already infected, Washington is moving swiftly, and Nairobi appears equally prepared to accommodate the operation without hesitation.

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Nyakundi Report

Newsroom 2 min read

The United States military is preparing to establish a temporary Ebola quarantine facility in central Kenya within a week, under a reported directive from President Donald Trump’s administration, as the outbreak spreads in parts of DRC and Uganda.

The plan involves setting up a field hospital designed to initially handle 50 patients, with capacity to expand to 250 beds if needed. Prefabricated medical units are expected to be airlifted and transported by road for rapid deployment, reflecting urgency in containing potential exposure cases among American citizens operating in or near affected regions.

According to reports, the project is being coordinated by the U.S. Departments of State, Health and Human Services, and Defense. Officials say Kenya’s geographic proximity to eastern DRC makes it a strategic location for stabilizing and monitoring exposed individuals before evacuation to the United States.

U.S. authorities have already reported several Ebola exposure cases involving American nationals in the region. Some have been transferred to Germany and the Czech Republic for monitoring, while others remain under observation. One confirmed infection has been reported in the DRC.

The directive also comes as Washington tightens border health measures, with officials stating that individuals infected with Ebola will not be allowed entry into the United States. Screening at all entry points has been intensified.

Reports further indicate that U.S. Public Health Service personnel are undergoing rapid training ahead of deployment to Kenya. However, internal concerns have been raised about the short training period and operational readiness.

In Nairobi, health officials have moved to reassure the public, saying Kenya has activated its Incident Management System, strengthened surveillance at points of entry, and enhanced laboratory testing capacity. Coordination between national and county governments has also been intensified.

The planned facility has sparked diplomatic and logistical scrutiny, with questions emerging over sovereignty, preparedness, and the implications of hosting foreign military medical operations during a regional health crisis. As Ebola containment efforts intensify in East Africa, the development underscores growing international reliance on Kenya as a regional hub for emergency response coordination and critical medical evacuation support and cross-border outbreak preparedness systems capacity strengthening frameworks.

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