There have been
more than 3,300 confirmed deaths from Ebola in Sierra Leone
|
Sierra Leone is to
enforce a three-day lockdown of key parts of the country to try to contain the
Ebola epidemic.
There have been 3,702
reported deaths from Ebola in the West African nation.
A three-day curfew in
September, keeping people at home under quarantine, was hailed as a success by
authorities, despite some criticism.
According to the BBC, the country's National
Ebola Response Centre says a new lockdown will come into place next week. It
will affect close to 2.5m people.
While the number of cases
has slowed since the peak of the outbreak, the virus is far from eradicated.
In the seven days leading
up to March 15, there were 55 new cases in Sierra Leone, and 90 in neighbouring
Guinea.
The number of new cases
in Liberia - where most deaths have occurred - has not been registered.
Palo Conteh, the head of
the NERC, told the AFP news agency that the curfew would take place across the
Western Area of Sierra Leone, a part of the country that includes the capital,
Freetown.
The districts of Bombali
and Port Loko will also be affected.
"The lockdown will
be conducted from March 27 to March 29 and will be like the one we conducted in
September last year," said Mr Conteh.
"The government and
partners are hopeful that latent cases that are now not being reported or
recorded will come out."
Mr Conteh said that health workers will visit
every house in the areas affected by the lockdown. They will remind people
about the dangers of touching corpses and taking patients to traditional
healers.
In other developments:
- Guinea's president Alpha Conde has called for a new push to eradicate Ebola after a rise in cases. On the weekend, a government report said 21 people were infected in a single day, compared to an average of eight a day;
- A UN spokesman tells the BBC: "We are still seeing too many infections taking place" in Sierra Leone;
- Liberia's government is to pay $5,000 (£3,391) to the families of each of the 179 health workers who died from the virus there.
There have been 10,216 deaths due to Ebola, according
to the World Health Organization.
The majority of those deaths have been in three
West African countries - Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone.
The economic effect of
the outbreak has been severe in Sierra Leone.
The World Bank estimates that
the revenue of some parts of the population has dropped by as much as 40%, and
that close to 180,000 people have lost work as a result of the crisis.
Despite dozens of new cases
every week, the government is determined to meet a target to eradicate Ebola by April 15.
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