Sierra Leone on Friday
lifted crippling nationwide restrictions on movement put in place at the height
of the Ebola crisis, amid signs that the deadly epidemic was retreating.
The nation of six million
had restricted travel for around half its population, sealing off six of its 14
districts and numerous tribal chiefdoms in response to an outbreak which has
killed more than 3,000 Sierra Leoneans.
"Restrictions on
movement will be eased to support economic activity. As such, there will no
longer be any district or chiefdom level restrictions on movement,"
President Ernest Bai Koroma said in an address to the nation late Thursday.
Koroma pointed to a
"steady downward trend" in new cases in recent weeks, adding that
"victory is in sight" but cautioning against complacency.
The president said the
travel bans would be removed from Friday and restrictions will be eased on
Saturday trading hours in the hard-hit Western Area, which includes the capital
Freetown.
The move marks huge progress
in a crisis which has seen commerce all but grind to a halt, with travel
restrictions hitting the rural communities particularly hard and sparking
warnings of a looming food crisis.
Sierra Leone is targeting
zero new cases by March 31 of the deadly tropical fever that has killed around
9,000 West Africans over the past year, according to official data, although
the real toll is thought to be significantly higher.
The country announced on
Thursday that it would end "risk payments" to healthcare workers dealing
with Ebola by that date and reopen schools, with teaching expected to resume in
the third week of March.
- 'We must not relent' -
The World Health
Organization said in its latest update that 8,626 people had died as of January
18, among a cumulative total of 21,689 cases.
Liberia, which had a peak
of over 300 new cases a week in August and September, registered just eight
last week, while there were only 20 confirmed cases in Guinea last week against
45 the week before.
The figure for Sierra
Leone was 117 last week against 184 the week before, the WHO said, but added
that the west of the country remained a problem area.
Koroma stressed however
that the crisis would not be over until all three countries had seen no new
cases for 42 days.
He vowed that anti-Ebola
measures such as a ban on washing bodies of victims of the highly infectious
virus would remain in place.
"Our records show
that this is now the greatest threat to our victory over the disease," he
said.
"Law enforcement
agencies and chiefs are under instruction to ensure that the full force of the
law is brought to bear on those who touch or wash dead bodies."
He added that while victory
over the epidemic was in sight, "we must not relent, we must continue to
soldier on".
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