The Washington Post (5/29, A1) reported that on Friday, a Kenyan court suspended an “administration plan to establish a makeshift field hospital in Kenya to quarantine Americans exposed to or infected with Ebola.” However, “the court, citing a threat to life, issued its ruling on the day US officials said the facility would begin operating, with capacity for up to 50 patients.” The New York Times (5/29, Otieno) reported, “The court order...came after a civil society group filed a petition challenging the constitutionality of the quarantine facility.” Meanwhile, The Hill (5/30, Weixel) reported the “administration has turned inward in response to the Ebola outbreak in Congo and Uganda, with increasingly isolationist policies that are alarming and disappointing infectious disease experts.” The CDC “and the State Department say they are ensuring rapid viral testing is available and are actively deploying State Department resources in Congo and Uganda.” However, “to veterans of past Ebola outbreaks and other infectious disease experts, the...administration appears to be more focused on keeping Ebola out of the US than helping fight the outbreak abroad.”