The Ebola burial team went on strike leaving dead bodies on the streets and homes of Sierra Leone’s capital, Freetown.
The woman shows her
distress as the body of Ebola victim is taken away by a team of volunteers.
The burial crews of 600
workers were organized in groups of 12. The teams are supposed to be paid up to
100 U.S. dollars (about N16,200) each week to remove the bodies of Ebola
victims.
The Health Ministry
spokesman, Sidie Yahya Tunis, described the situation as “very embarrassing“.
“The health ministry is
going to investigate the delay in the health workers not receiving their
money,” she said.
However, the Deputy Health
Minister, Madina Rahman, said in a radio program that the strike has been
‘resolved’.
The disagreement centred on
a one-week backlog for hazard pay, which had been put in the bank, but was not
given to the burial team on time.
Volunteers remove the body
of Ebola dead from the street.
Finally, the rotting bodies
of Ebola victims have been reportedly removed from the streets of Freetown.
Volunteers in Waterloo,
Sierra Leone bury the dead after burial teams strike action.The Ebola victims’ dead
bodies are highly infectious, increasing fears more people were at risk of
contracting the disease.
The grave of Ebola victim
Ballah Kollie, who died on October, 6, 2014.
The World Health
Organization says Ebola is believed to have killed more than 600 people in
Sierra Leone only. The number of confirmed cases in this single country is more
than 2,100 so far.
Too sad
ReplyDeleteGod we call upon you
ReplyDeleteTrust Africans, they embezzle the money.
ReplyDeleteThese are humans not animal
ReplyDelete