MONROVIA (Reuters) - A five-year-old boy tested positive for Ebola in Liberia just days after his mother died of the virus in the second flare-up to hit West Africa in recent weeks, the health ministry said on Sunday.
A 30-year-old woman died of Ebola in Monrovia last week, months after Liberia was declared free of the virus. Her death followed a recent flare-up that cost the lives of at least four people in neighbouring Guinea.
"A five-year-old boy, the son of the deceased, tested positive early on Sunday morning," Deputy Health Minister Tolbert Nyenswah said.
More than 11,300 people have died over the past two years in the world's worst Ebola epidemic, nearly all of them in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.
While the WHO said this week that West Africa's Ebola outbreak no longer constitutes an international public health risk, there have been small flare-ups even after countries received the all-clear.
Guinea announced new cases on March 17 just hours after Sierra Leone declared an end of active transmission, which briefly meant that West Africa was officially free of Ebola.
Liberia subsequently closed its border with Guinea, fearing the potential spread of the outbreak onto its territory.
It was not immediately known whether the death in Liberia was linked to the new cases in Guinea.
(Reporting by James Harding Giahyue; writing by Edward McAllister; editing by Susan Thomas)
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