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TIMELINE: Worst Ebola outbreak on record has claimed at least 3,000 lives so far

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International agencies and governments are fighting to contain the world's worst Ebola epidemic since the disease was identified in 1976. The virus, which causes fever and bleeding, has killed at least 3,000 people in Western Africa since its outbreak in March 2014.

Here is a timeline of the outbreak:

March 22: Guinea confirms a previously unidentified hemorrhagic fever, which killed over 50 people in its southeastern Forest Region, is Ebola. One study traces the suspected original source to a two-year-old boy in the town of Gueckedou. Cases are also reported in the capital, Conakry.

March 30: Liberia reports two Ebola cases; suspected cases reported in Sierra Leone.

April 1: Medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) warns the epidemic's spread is "unprecedented." But a World Health Organisation (WHO) spokesman calls it "relatively small still."

April 4: A mob attacks an Ebola treatment center in southeastern Guinea. Healthcare workers in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia face growing hostility from fearful, suspicious local people.

May 26: WHO confirms first Ebola deaths in Sierra Leone.

June 17: Liberia says Ebola has reached its capital, Monrovia.

June 23: With deaths above 350, making the West African outbreak the worst Ebola epidemic on record, MSF says it is "out of control" and calls for massive resources.

July 25: Nigeria, Africa's biggest economy, confirms its first Ebola case, a man who died in Lagos after traveling from Monrovia.

July 29: Dr. Sheik Umar Khan, who was leading Sierra Leone's fight against the epidemic, dies of Ebola.

July 30: Liberia shuts schools and quarantines the worst-affected communities, using troops for enforcement.

August 2: A US missionary physician infected with Ebola in Liberia is flown to Atlanta in the United States for treatment.

August 5: A second US missionary infected with Ebola is flown from Liberia to Atlanta for treatment.

August 8: WHO declares Ebola "international public health emergency," stops short of urging ban on trade and travel.

August 12: WHO says death toll has topped 1,000, approves use of unproven drugs or vaccines.

A Spanish priest with Ebola dies in a Madrid hospital.

August 15: MSF says the epidemic will take about six months to control.

August 20: Security forces in Monrovia fire shots, tear gas to disperse crowd trying to break out of quarantine, killing a teenager.

August 21: The two US missionary aid workers treated in Atlanta are released from the hospital free of the virus.

August 24: Democratic Republic of Congo declares Ebola outbreak in a northern province, apparently separate from larger outbreak.

An infected British medical worker is flown home from Sierra Leone for treatment.

August 28: WHO puts death toll at above 1,550, warns outbreak could infect more than 20,000.

August 29: Senegal reports first confirmed Ebola case.

September 2: MSF President Joanne Liu tells UN members the world is "losing the battle" to contain Ebola, slams "a global coalition of inaction."

September 3: Epidemic's pace accelerates; deaths top 1,900. Officials say there were close to 400 deaths in the past week. A third US missionary doctor infected with Ebola is flown out of Liberia for treatment in Omaha, Nebraska.

September 5: Latest WHO tally: More than 2,100 dead out of about 4,000 people thought to have been infected.

September 7: President Barack Obama says in an interview the United States needs to do more to help control Ebola to prevent it from becoming a global crisis.

September 8: Britain says it will send military and humanitarian experts to Sierra Leone to set up a treatment center; United States says it will send 25-bed military field hospital to Liberia to care for health workers.

A fourth Ebola patient will be flown to the United States for treatment in Atlanta.

September 9: New WHO tally: At least 2,296 dead out of 4,293 cases recorded in five countries.

September 13: Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf appeals to Obama for urgent aid in tackling Ebola.

September 16: The United States promises to send 3,000 military engineers and medical personnel to West Africa to build clinics and train healthcare workers.

New WHO tally: 2,461 dead out of 4,985 infected, a doubling of the death toll in the past month.

September 17: MSF says a French nurse volunteering for the medical charity in Liberia has Ebola.

September 18: New WHO tally: 2,630 dead out of 5,357 believed infected. The United Nations says a special mission to combat Ebola will deploy staff in Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone. UN Security Council adopts US-drafted resolution calling for the lifting of travel and border restrictions. French President Francois Hollande says a military hospital will be set up in Guinea.

September 19: Streets in Sierra Leone's capital, Freetown, are deserted as the country starts a controversial three-day lockdown to try to halt Ebola's spread.

September 22: WHO says the outbreak has been largely contained in Senegal and Nigeria but says Ebola has killed more than 2,811 people in West Africa.

September 23: The CDC estimates between 550,000 and 1.4 million people in West Africa may be infected with Ebola by January.

September 25: At a meeting on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly, Obama calls on more countries to help fight Ebola, saying hundreds of thousands of lives are at stake.

September 26: New WHO tally: 3,091 dead out of 6,574 probable, suspected and confirmed cases. Cuba says it will send nearly 300 doctors and nurses to West Africa, to join 165 healthcare workers slated to arrive in early October.

September 30: CDC confirms the first diagnosis in the United States of a patient infected with Ebola. The patient, being treated at a hospital in Dallas, had traveled to West Africa.

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