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An
international charity, Oxfam GB, has called for a multimillion dollar
post-Ebola “Marshall Plan” to aid the recovery of Sierra Leone, Liberia and
Guinea, which have been worst affected by the Ebola outbreak, RT.com reports.
More than 8,600 people have died, the vast
majority of them in the three West African countries, since the outbreak began
in March last year.
“People
need cash in their hands now, they need good jobs to feed their families in the
near future and decent health, education and other essential services,"
said Oxfam's executive director, Winnie Byanyima. “They’ve gone through hell, they cannot be left high and
dry.”
She
added: “The world cannot walk
away now that, thankfully, cases of this deadly disease are dropping. Failure
to help these countries after surviving Ebola will condemn them to a double
disaster. The world was late in waking up to the Ebola crisis, there can be no
excuses for not helping to put these economies and lives back together.”
The
Marshall Plan was the post-World War II scheme for European recovery.
Oxfam
said there were three main priorities for any successful recovery package:
Immediate cash to millions of families affected by the crisis; Investment in
jobs; and budget support for essential services such as health, education,
water and sanitation.
The
charity is calling for a conference at which rich developed nations provide
financial support “to help
efforts to rebuild lives and put the economies back on the road to growth”
in the Ebola-stricken countries.
“People
are struggling to make ends meet as their incomes plummet,”
Oxfam said. The charity said there is a scarcity of money to buy food due to
declining incomes and rapidly rising food prices.
Some
73 percent of families in three Liberian counties have seen their incomes
decline following the outbreak. In Liberia the price of rice has risen 40
percent above its seasonal average.
The
World Bank has estimated nearly 180,000 people have lost their jobs in Sierra
Leone.
Scientists
around the world have been working on an Ebola vaccine, as no proven cure has
been found for the deadly virus. A US-funded program is set to begin in Liberia
and will initially provide 600 people with the experimental vaccine.
Liberia's
president Ellen Johnson Sirleaf on Monday announced that an Ebola treatment
facility in the center of the outbreak will be closed, as the spread of the
virus has slowed in the country.
“Lofa,
the epicenter of the virus, has had no new cases for over 70 days,” she said in
a speech to the country’s parliament. “Today we take pride that 13 of 15 ...
counties have not reported new cases for 21 days,”
she said, referring to the virus's maximum incubation period.
Liberia,
once ground zero of West Africa's deadly Ebola epidemic, has just five
remaining confirmed cases of the disease, against a peak of more than 300 a
week in August to September.
“Our
diligent doctors and health workers supported by international partners have
brought joy to us,” Johnson Sirleaf added. “Ebola has made 3,000 orphans who need
attention. I thank all the countries who came to our rescue when we thought all
was lost.”
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