Health
workers demonstrate in Liberia's capital Monrovia on April 18, 2015 to demand
risk benefits promised by the government ©Zoom Dosso (AFP)
|
Seven hundred Liberian Ebola workers took
to the streets of the capital Monrovia for a second day on Saturday to demand
promised hazard pay.
"We
took risks so we deserve our benefits," demonstrators chanted as the
protest began Friday, when they disrupted a ceremony during which French
charity Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) was to hand over
management of Liberia's main Ebola unit to the government. "Tolbert
Nyensuah give us our money," they said, referring to the head of the
government's Ebola response team.
AFP report continues:
The
workers hired by MSF, which has been in the forefront of the battle against the
west African epidemic, on Saturday again blocked the entrance to Liberia's --
and the world's -- biggest Ebola facility.
The
Ebola Treatment Unit, known as ELWA 3, has more than 400 beds and a work force
including 700 healthcare workers hired by MSF.
It
was the country's reference facility during the height of the Ebola epidemic in
Liberia, which has recorded no new cases in several weeks.
"We
were here when the heat was on. We took risks, some of our colleagues died, but
we continue our work to save the lives of the thousands of Liberians who had
the virus," a spokesman for the workers told AFP.
"We
were told that we would receive risk benefits at the end of the epidemic. MSF
wants to turn over (ELWA 3) to the government and the government has not yet
given us our risk benefit," Amara Sambolah said.
The
protesters did not indicate the amount of the hazard pay they say is owed by
the government. MSF officials at the protests declined to comment.
Saye
Bawuo, Liberia's assistant health minister, apologized for the cancellation of
Friday's event and said the health ministry would "look into this issue,
to see how redress can be attended to."
Liberia
is one of three countries, together with Guinea and Sierra Leone, that were
ravaged by the worst outbreak of Ebola in history.
The
epidemic has killed at least 10,600 people since December 2013, some 500 of
them healthcare workers.
At
the height of the outbreak last September and October, Libera was registering
more than 300 new cases each week.
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