Augustine Baker's role in tackling the Ebola virus has
been widely admired
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A
Sierra Leonean who worked with children orphaned by Ebola has died of the
disease himself. Augustine Baker had been admitted to an Ebola treatment centre
after becoming ill last week. He had worked for St George Foundation, an orphanage run by a UK
charity on the outskirts of Sierra Leone's capital, Freetown.
Augustine
Baker was an unsung hero. At
the height of the Ebola crisis he would go into high-risk communities to help
children who had been orphaned by the disease. With his backpack on and his
notebook and pen handy, Mr Baker would collect data and go and find the
children to take them to the orphanage, according a BBC report.
BBC reports thirty-three
children and seven staff at the St George Foundation orphanage have been in
quarantine since Mr Baker was diagnosed with the deadly virus.
His
colleagues, who are locked in quarantine at the orphanage, were grieving as
news of his death broke.
Jestina
Conteh was sobbing as she spoke to me on the phone. He said Mr Baker was
"a dedicated colleague who never said 'No' in search of Ebola orphans".
When
Mr Baker was diagnosed with Ebola, orphanage co-founder Philip Dean said he had
"worked tirelessly to help children orphaned by the disease. He
knew that he was at risk but did the job because it needed to be done."
Screengrab
from clip on St George Foundation orphanage
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The
orphanage was set up in 2004 and, until the Ebola outbreak, was mainly
concerned with rescuing street children. In
the last year it has helped care for some 200 children orphaned by Ebola.
Ebola
has killed more than 9,500 people in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea.
But in recent weeks, the
crisis has eased and the governments of the three countries have pledged to
achieve zero Ebola infections within the next two months.
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