Sierra Leone health
officials check passengers at the border crossing with Liberia in Jendema on
March 28, 2015 ©Zoom Dosso (AFP)
|
Sierra Leoneans
breathed a sigh of relief on Monday as they emerged from a three-day nationwide
lockdown imposed in a bid to prevent a resurgence of the deadly Ebola virus.
The country's
population of more than six million had been confined to their homes starting
early on Friday, for the second time in six months, on orders from President
Ernest Bai Koroma.
AFP report continues:
"Stepping out
this morning, I took several sniffs of the fresh air and said 'thank you,
Lord'," hawker Tommy Carew smiled as he returned to the streets in the
capital Freetown.
The city of 1.2
million had been deserted since the order took effect, with markets,
businesses, banks and office buildings shut and only healthcare workers'
vehicles plying the streets.
The lockdown was
called over fears the disease that has killed almost a third of the 12,000
people infected in Sierra Leone was making a comeback around the capital and in
the north.
Nearly 26,000
volunteers went door-to-door over the weekend in a nationwide search for hidden
corpses and patients.
Officials said on
Sunday that 40 bodies and 172 sick people had been taken from homes in the
Western Area, which includes the capital, over the first two days of the
exercise.
Banks, supermarkets
and freshly restocked markets heaved in Freetown on Monday as shoppers headed
out to make up for missed grocery runs.
One bakery said it
had run out of bread within three hours of opening.
The city's narrow
streets, eerily quiet throughout the weekend, once again seethed with traffic,
noise and pollution as motorists got back behind the wheel.
"It's a great
relief that it has ended and I hope it will be the last as it hit hard on my
business," said taxi driver Sammy Keitell.
Market stallholder
Bintu Sillah described the lockdown as "like being put in a cage and the
key thrown away".
"I realize that
all was in the task of fighting Ebola but it was hard staying indoors and
looking at the ceiling," she told AFP.
Residents contacted
by AFP have been broadly supportive of the curfew, and complaints on Monday
focused on boredom, although some householders said they were not given soap
promised by health teams.
Seamstress Finda
George said she used the time indoors to reflect on those who had lost their
lives.
"They need our
thoughts and because we are so busy, we hardly take time to remember
them," she said.
The outbreak has
killed 10,400 people since it began in Guinea in December 2013 and spread to
neighbouring Liberia and Sierra Leone, according to the World Health
Organization.
Government officials
declared the lockdown a success although they added that final data on bodies
recovered and patients processed would not be available until Tuesday at the
earliest.
No comments:
Post a Comment