Dr.
Ernest Bai Koroma, the fourth President of Sierra Leone, is leading his country
forward through his ambitious Agenda for Change programme. (Photo: European-times.com)
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Sierra
Leone President Ernest Bai Koroma has asked the country to begin a week of
fasting and prayers to end the Ebola virus that has killed more than 2,700
people in the country.
Aljazeera
reports in a New Year’s Day broadcast on Thursday, President Koroma said the
seven days of prayers and fasting would begin immediately. “Today I ask all to
commit our actions to the grace, mercy and protection of God Almighty,” he
said.
“I
know what we are being asked to do is very difficult; we are a people that have
built our humanity on hugging each other, on shaking hands, on caring for
the sick and showing communal empathy by participating in funeral activities,”
he said.
“But
today the Ebola devil of illness and death hides in the innocent clothing of
our culture to get us,” he said.
The
worst outbreak on record of the virus is still spreading in West Africa,
especially in Sierra Leone, and the number of known cases globally has exceeded
20,000, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Wednesday.
The
death toll from the outbreak, which has been mostly confined to West Africa,
has risen to 7,905, the WHO said, following 317 fatalities recorded since it
last issued figures on December 24.
Sierra
Leone is the worst-hit country with more than 9,000 Ebola cases and the number
of infections continue to grow. It accounted for 337 of 476 new
laboratory-confirmed cases since December 24.
Koroma
also said schools – which have been shut since July to curb the spread of the
virus – would reopen soon.
“The
ministry of education is putting in place modalities to reopen schools and
colleges in the shortest possible time,” Koroma said, without giving a specific
date.
Many
schools are being used as Ebola holding centres, raising questions as to how soon
they will be able to reopen.
Koroma
urged people not to touch the sick or corpses and not to disobey quarantine
orders.
Guinea,
Liberia and Sierra Leone have been the hardest-hit countries in the epidemic.
In Sierra Leone, there are
signs the increase of new cases has slowed, but the WHO says “the country’s
west is now experiencing the most intense transmission of all the affected
countries”.
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