Indeed. The WHO doesn't even recommend a travel ban to/from the affected countries.
The WHO recommendations at the link embedded in the update are:
- There should be no general ban on international travel or trade; restrictions outlined in these recommendations regarding the travel of EVD cases and contacts should be implemented.
- States should provide travelers to Ebola affected and at-risk areas with relevant information on risks, measures to minimize those risks, and advice for managing a potential exposure.
- States should be prepared to detect, investigate, and manage Ebola cases; this should include assured access to a qualified diagnostic laboratory for EVD and, where appropriate, the capacity to manage travelers originating from known Ebola-infected areas who arrive at international airports or major land crossing points with unexplained febrile illness.
- The general public should be provided with accurate and relevant information on the Ebola outbreak and measures to reduce the risk of exposure.
- States should be prepared to facilitate the evacuation and repatriation of nationals (e.g. health workers) who have been exposed to Ebola.
The WHO doesn't even recommend a travel ban to/from the affected countries. The WHO is concerned with the health of the world, as opposed to its people. Hence, a world with fewer people is, to them, a healthier world. This is a disease that is made to order, quick, messy, highly contagious, and primarily destructive to the poor.
Somebody is going to make a lot of money in the personal protective equipment business, and somebody else is going to gain considerable leverage dispensing experimental treatments.