First,
Ebola Orphans suffered bullying …and now hunger!!!
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Thousands of Ebola
orphans, teenage mothers and children in charge of households in Sierra Leone
are struggling to feed themselves and their families amid widespread food
shortages in the West African nation, a British charity said on Monday.
Thomson
Reuters Foundation report continues:
While
most families devastated by Ebola have received humanitarian aid, at least
1,400 children orphaned by the epidemic urgently need support, according to
Street Child.
The
world's worst outbreak of the disease - now officially over - killed more than
11,300 people and infected some 28,600 as it swept through Sierra Leone,
Liberia and Guinea from 2013.
"Teenage
orphans have taken on the burden of looking after their young siblings and are
struggling to cope," Street Child's chief executive officer Tom Dannatt
said in a statement.
"Several
have dropped out of school, sacrificing their own futures to try and make sure
that their brothers and sisters can stay in education," Dannatt added.
"Sadly, running a business and a household is proving too tough for many
of them."
Some
3.5 million people - more than half of Sierra Leone's population of six million
- do not have enough safe and nutritious food to eat, the World Food Programme
(WFP) and Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) said last month.
Food
shortages in most of the country are caused by problems that predate the Ebola
outbreak, according to the U.N. food agencies, which said the number of people
"severely" affected by a lack of food has increased by 60 percent
since 2010.
The
shortages, which have seen the price of a bag of rice more than double since
2014, have hit orphans, teenage mothers and child-headed households the
hardest, Street Child said.
The
Ebola epidemic left more than 12,000 children orphaned while at least 18,000
teenage girls became pregnant during the outbreak, according to the U.N.
Population Fund (UNFPA).
"A collapsed economy that is no longer propped up by the aid given during and immediately after Ebola means that life is very hard for everyone," Dannatt said, adding that more people may go hungry and more girls may be forced to sell sex to afford food.
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