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Volunteers of German army Bundeswehr, wearing protective suits, are seen in a dressing area during an Ebola training session at the Marseille barracks in Appen, Oct. 23, 2014. The World Health Organization says Ebola is still an international health emergency, despite Nigeria and Senegal being declared free of the disease.FABIAN BIMMER/Reuters

The World Health Organization said Thursday that the Ebola outbreak in West Africa, which has killed over 4,800 people, is still an international health emergency.

WHO experts said international travellers from the three hardest-hit nations – Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia – should still be screened for possible Ebola symptoms to prevent the disease from spreading further. But they said there should be no general ban on travel and trade with those countries.

In Spain, five of the 15 people who came into contact with a nursing assistant who survived Ebola were released from the hospital Thursday after spending 21 days under observation and showing no signs of the disease.

The nursing assistant, 44-year-old Teresa Romero, was cleared of the virus on Tuesday.

In Germany, military volunteers climbed into medical protective suits and got sprayed with bleach for a mission to support efforts to fight Ebola by the German Red Cross in Liberia.

The European Union on Thursday came up with another €24.4-million ($31-million) to fight Ebola, as the bloc's leaders pressed to create a 1 billion-euro ($1.26-billion) fund to fight the deadly virus.

British Prime Minister David Cameron set that target last week and prior to Thursday's start of a two-day EU leaders' summit, the bloc's total anti-Ebola commitments were over halfway to that goal. Britain says it has committed 125 million pounds ($200-million) toward fighting Ebola, more than any other EU nation.

EU Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said the money promised Thursday would go for medical research on an Ebola vaccine.

An international consortium led by the Institute of Tropical Medicine in Antwerp, meanwhile, announced it would study whether treating Ebola patients with antibodies from the blood of survivors could help. Researchers got €2.9-million ($3.7-million) to test the safety and effectiveness of treating patients with blood and plasma from people who have recovered from Ebola.

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