“FAAN Tightens Ebola Surveillance Across Nigeria’s International Airports Amid Central Africa Outbreak”
Nigeria’s aviation authorities have intensified health surveillance and emergency preparedness measures at the country’s international airports following renewed concerns over an Ebola outbreak reported in parts of Central Africa.
The Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) said enhanced screening protocols, passenger monitoring systems, and emergency response mechanisms have been activated to reduce the risk of cross border transmission through Nigeria’s air travel network.
According to FAAN officials, health personnel stationed at international terminals are working closely with relevant government agencies to strengthen disease detection and rapid response procedures. The agency noted that thermal screening devices, passenger health assessments, isolation procedures, and public health awareness campaigns are being reinforced across key airports, including those in Lagos, Abuja, Kano, and Port Harcourt.
The renewed measures come amid growing regional vigilance after health authorities in Central Africa confirmed new Ebola-related cases, prompting several African nations to review border health security systems and outbreak response capacities.
FAAN emphasized that Nigeria remains committed to maintaining strict compliance with international public health and aviation safety standards. The authority also reassured travelers that the preventive measures are precautionary and aimed at protecting passengers, airline workers, and airport personnel without disrupting normal flight operations.
Public health experts have repeatedly highlighted Nigeria’s previous experience in successfully containing Ebola during the 2014 outbreak as a critical advantage in managing future health threats. That response, widely praised by global health institutions, strengthened the country’s emergency disease surveillance framework and inter agency coordination systems.
Officials from Nigeria’s health and aviation sectors continue to encourage travelers to observe hygiene protocols, promptly report symptoms associated with viral infections, and cooperate with airport screening procedures.
The development reflects broader continental concerns over infectious disease preparedness as African governments seek to improve airport surveillance infrastructure, emergency healthcare coordination, and cross border disease monitoring in response to emergency.

