Liberia’s armed forces have reportedly been given orders to shoot people
trying to illegally cross the border from neighbouring Sierra Leone,
which was closed to stem the spread of ebola. Soldiers stationed in Bomi
and Grand Cape Mount counties, which border Sierra Leone, were to “shoot on sight” any person trying to cross the border, said deputy chief of staff, Colonel Eric Dennis.
According
to reports, the order came after border officials reported that people
have continued to cross the porous border illegally. Previously, Grand
Cape Mount county had 35 known “illegal entry points,” according to immigration commander Colonel Samuel Mulbah. Illegal crossings were a major health threat, said Mulbah, “because we don’t know the health status of those who cross at night.”
Like war: The Ebola crisis
Liberia
closed its borders with Sierra Leone weeks ago in an attempt to contain
the ebola outbreak, which has killed more than 1100 people in West
Africa so far. Meanwhile, Liberian officials are continuing to search
for 17 ebola patients who fled an attack on a quarantine centre in
Monrovia, raising fears they could spread the deadly disease. “We have not yet found them,” Information Minister Lewis Brown said, yesterday, adding that those who looted the place took away mattresses and bedding that were soaked with fluids from the patients.”
On
Saturday, youths wielding clubs and knives raided the medical facility
set up in a high school in the densely-populated West Point, some
shouting “there’s no ebola”, echoing wild rumours that the
epidemic has been made up by the West to oppress Africans. Authorities
are now considering sealing off the area, home to around 75,000 people,
although some reports suggest the infected patients may have already
fled West Point.
WHO urges detention of suspect patients
Meantime,
the World Health Organization, WHO, yesterday, urged the authorities in
countries affected by the ebola outbreak to screen people departing
international airports, seaports and major border crossings and stop
those with symptoms of the virus from leaving. “Affected countries
are requested to conduct exit screening of all persons at international
airports, seaports and major land crossings, for unexplained febrile
illness consistent with potential Ebola infection. Any person with an
illness consistent with Ebola Virus Disease, EVD, should not be allowed
to travel unless the travel is part of an appropriate medical
evacuation,” the UN health agency said.
Our Bush meat has no Ebola – Oyo State Bushmeat Sellers Association
On
the flip side, scores of bush meat sellers, yesterday, marched
peacefully to Governor Abiola Ajimobi’s office at the Oyo State
Secretariat, Ibadan, complaining of low patronage due to the outbreak of
ebola disease. The women under the aegis of Bushmeat Sellers
Association lamented that since the announcement that the deadly disease
could be caused by eating bush meat, their sales had suffered a lull.
Speaking
on behalf of the association, Alhaja Risikat Odeyemi, Iyalode, Bushmeat
Association, Oyo, said that it was strange that bush meat which had
hitherto been taken as a special delicacy should now be seen as a
poison. Her words: “Our meats do not have any Ebola virus. We don’t
know why people should just be peddling rumour that would be injurious
to other people. This is not good at all. They have spoilt our business
without any good reason. What we heard is that the disease was contacted
through the river. Why should they be so unfair?”
They said
before the announcement, a grass cutter was being sold between N2,000
and N4,000 and the same thing goes for antelope and other animals. But,
now they regretted that there are no sales again. “We normally stand
by the roadside to invite prospective buyers. But, now when we call them
to buy bush meats they always reply us saying, “Ebola”. It is the same
meat we have been eating and nothing has happened to us”, Odeyemi said.
Their
visit to the governor’s office, she added, was to appeal to him to help
dispel the rumour that bush meat causes Ebola. At the time our
correspondent left the governor’s office, the governor was yet to attend
to them. Many of the bush meat sellers sat clumsily at the entrance of
the gate because the security men at the gate did not allow them to move
closer to the governor’s office.
Tuesday, 19 August 2014
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