Ellen Johnson Sirleaf (Photo:
Stu Rosner)
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It is the
early hours of the morning and bars in the Liberian capital are packed as
revellers drink, sing and rejoice their first night of freedom with the Ebola
curfew lifted.
AFP reports for long,
miserable months people have trudged home in the evenings under tough
restrictions to stem the spread of an epidemic which has killed thousands and
devastated the economy.
But the
country of four million is slowly emerging from the epidemic, with infections
at a fraction of the peak, borders reopening, children back at school and now
the night-time lockdown lifted.
In
Monrovia, people feel like celebrating -- in their thousands -- and the night
air is alive with music and laughter.
"Why
am I looking at the time... Beginning tonight we no longer have to be running
home. More drink, more drink," cries Samuel Crayton at a bar crammed with
people still in their beachwear in the Paynesville area.
Students
stand in line before heading to their classrooms at Don Bosco High School in
Monrovia on February 16, 2015 ©Zoom Dosso (AFP)
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Liberia
and its neighbours Guinea and Sierra Leone have registered almost 9,500 Ebola
deaths since December 2013, although the real picture could be far worse as it
is feared many cases have not been reported.
The World
Bank said in January the economic damage of the epidemic could run to US$6.2
billion (5.4 billion euros), trimming an earlier estimate of US$25 billion.
- 'We are
free!' -
Panicked
by the intense spread of the epidemic, Liberia imposed the curfew on August 6,
initially from 9:00 pm to 6:00 am but subsequently relaxed, applying from
midnight until 6:00 am.
The end of
the lockdown was announced on Friday as the United States said President Ellen
Johnson Sirleaf would visit this week to discuss the gruelling task of economic recovery
with President Barack Obama.
"I am
very happy for this day. I could no longer make money. Usually on Sundays we
get the higher numbers of customers but they used to leave (early) because of
the curfew," bar owner Cecelia Yerkerson told AFP, sometime after
midnight.
"Now
that the curfew is lifted you can see that they are still here at this time and
don't even think about the time. So I am happy."
A few
kilometres (miles) away, several young girls break into song as they wait for
the waiter to bring their drinks at another bar.
"Free,
we are free! No more curfew breaking! Free, we are free," they sing.
Jacqueline
Dahn, 21, gets up and dances, shouting over the noise of the celebration that
her newfound freedom feels like getting out of jail.
"For
several months I have not been out at this time. It was like being in prison
every evening," she says.
"I am
very happy for the lifting of the curfew. I don’t know how to express my
happiness."
- Profound
symbol -
The
restart of nightlife in a country that likes to party is a huge morale booster
and a profound symbol of Liberia's recovery, but it is the reopening of border
crossings that is most significant to traders.
Almost
everything available in the country's street markets has to be shipped in from
neighbouring countries and prices soared when crossings to Sierra Leone and
Guinea were closed.
"I go
to Guinea to import goods. I import clothes, rubber dishes and slippers. Since
the closure of the borders I have been sitting and doing nothing,"
Monrovia trader Stephen Williams told AFP.
"I am
more than happy for the reopening of the borders. I will resume on Monday so I
can be able to send my children to school."
For
cash-strapped shoppers in the impoverished nation, the lifting of restrictions
could not have come soon enough.
"It is good to
hear that the borders are reopened but the question here is when will we see
the prices of commodities going down to where they were before the outbreak,"
Patricia Paye, 36, told AFP.
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