By State House Communications Unit
HE talking to chiefs and religious leaders |
On a working visit to Port Loko, Bombali and
Tonkolili districts over the weekend, President Ernest Bai Koroma issued a
stern warning to traditional and religious leaders to take responsibility to
halt the spread of the virus in their chiefdoms and districts.
He said the country has a crisis that should
be handled with all the seriousness it deserves and added that government in
its efforts to improving the efficiency of handling the outbreak restructured
the then Emergency Operations Center (EOC) to the National Ebola Response
Centre (NERC). “We are at war with terror; so we have to put in place military
tactics to win this war with command and control structures at district level
to be cascaded further at chiefdom level to halt the disease in its tracks.” He
underscored the role of traditional leaders in the fight against Ebola and
admonished against anyone who fails to abide by the precautions of the Health
Ministry.
Although he acknowledged the fact that Ebola
was threatening the country’s rich traditions, the president continued to
admonish traditional and religious leaders to intensify sensitization among
their people and to further abide by the safety measures set out by the
Ministry of Health and Sanitation, and encouraged them to report to the nearest
health centre when they are sick. “Don’t touch the sick or dead, report to the
nearest health centre of any sick person. Don’t wash any corpse when you are
not sure of what was the cause of death,” he warned, and furthered that
Kailahun has done very well because of the bye-laws and the people are
complying.” Whilst calling for the cooperation of traditional and religious
leaders to scale up their efforts, he urged the chiefs to invoke the bye-laws
and enforce compliance to break the chain of transmission.
President Koroma registered government’s
commitment to increasing the number of treatment centers and increase lab
capacities, but warned that if the attitude of people does not change “We will
continue to work without results”. He stated that the British are constructing
holding and treatment centers that will have their own laboratories in both
Bombali and Port Loko districts and noted that the 110 bed capacity treatment
centre funded by Addax Bioenergy at the Magbenteh Hospital in Makeni will be
completed by 10th November, 2014, while the 100 bed Ebola Treatment Unit (ETU)
in Port Loko will be completed by the end of November. Meanwhile, the District
Health Management Team (DHMT) is also constructing a holding and treatment
centre in Port Loko; 15 bed holding centre for children, 40 bed holding area,
and four units of 12 beds each totaling 48 bed treatment unit. The
International Medical Corps (IMC) is also constructing a 100 bed Ebola
Treatment Unit in Lunsar and another 100 bed ETU in Makeni with funds being
provided by the British government, Irish Aid among others.
The International Medical Corps’ Hussein
Ibrahim said a total of 100 beds of which 50 beds for confirmed cases and 50
beds for suspected, probable and convalescent cases will be completed by the
end of November in Lunsar.
In a related development, President Koroma
visited holding centers at Magburaka, Mabeseneh and Feredugu and the African
Muslim Agency Hospital in Makeni. He used the opportunity to talk to Ebola
survivors at the Magbenteh hospital to tell their stories to their various
communities and encourage others of their chances of survival when they report
early for treatment. “You are an example of what it means to report early for
treatment.” He also encouraged quarantined health workers at the Magburaka
hospital to stay in isolation until the period of 21 days is lapsed.
President Koroma was accompanied by the
British High Commissioner, Peter West, DFID’s Donal Brown who is the UK’s Ebola
point-man in Sierra Leone, some cabinet ministers and senior government
officials.
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