At the Miatta Conference Center in Freetown about thirty minutes
ago, President Ernest Bai Koroma told the assembled tribal headmen/women,
councilors, and parliamentarians of the Western Area of Freetown that his
government is now in a “new phase” in the Ebola War which would involve a
“military approach”.
This “military approach” is what has necessitated the President
getting the former defense minister, Major Palo Conteh (Rtd), as CEO of the new
Ebola Command with the acronym “NERC”.
Referring to President Koroma as the “frontline commander”, Hon.
Shekuba Amani Sannoh, Member of Parliament for Constituency 112, underlined the
mood and tone of the President who said laws would be “enforced” with military
dispatch against those who continue to violate the anti-Ebola logic of
non-Ebola personnel washing of corpses of people. The President said that they
should use “force” against those who “resist” the dictates of the anti-Ebola
burial teams, contract tracers, etc.
The traditional leaders, and councilors, and especially youth,
were exhorted by the President to “comb” their neighbourhoods: “You know
everybody and everything about your neighbourhood. If you don’t see a person
for a couple of days and you suspect the person is sick and is hiding inside
his/her house, report the matter. Insist that contact be made with the Ebola
Surveillance Team”.
The President raised alarm at the Ebola statistics which shows
over 4,000 people have been infected in the country; and said that especially
the over 500 infection rates in Freetown, over 500 in Bombali, and over 500
Ebola cases Port Loko are simply “unacceptable”.
President Koroma said other people in the country should emulate
what is being done in Kenema and Kailahun where “anybody with Ebola from
outside those districts are quickly fingered by the community, and the people
would insist they go into quarantine”.
The “bottleneck” in the Ebola War is the lack of adequate
laboratories – as people who die have to wait a couple of days before the
laboratories can determine and report to their relatives that they had Ebola or
would be Ebola free. The President said the British team that has arrived would
help to mitigate this problem.
Hope was expressed by the President that the 300 beds in the
treatment centers in Kailahun, Kenema, and Freetown would be increased to 600
by the end of November – which still falls short of the 1,500 beds the country
needs for Ebola patients.
The “responsibility” for ending the Ebola pandemic would lay not
with the large number of international people who are in the country (US, UK,
Nigerians, Cubans, EU, AU, etc), but, with the leaders showing leadership by
“not compromising” with those who in spite of all the blizzard of
“sensitization” still choose to do those things which would lead to transmission
of the Ebola.
Like President Lansana Conte of Guinea did a couple of days ago
during an interview with the BBC, President Koroma took a swipe at
international organizations who appear to be benefiting from the Ebola Outbreak
“riding their four-wheel jeeps”: “We need development and business people; not
people in the Ebola Business”. President Koroma said that his government would
insist in complete transparency and accountability in how international
organizations are handling funds meant for the Ebola War.
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