Tuesday, September 30, 2014

KingTom cemetery and the burial teams


The KingTom cemetery is very near the centre of Freetown... and this is where they're burying many of the Ebola-related bodies. The terrain is jungle-like... and even has a few unwanted, rooting animals roaming about. 


The 8 burial teams, spread out across the Freetown area, converge to carry the dead back into the cemetery to be buried in unmarked graves. No family. No friends. No services. But, the group of burial boys I met were dedicated and hard-working.


A mother and her two small children were buried together after succumbing to the Ebola virus.


The path that leads through the KingTom cemetery is a community path... littered with garbage and frequently travelled. This is a burial team coming out after burying the 5 bodies they picked up that morning (Tuesday, September 30, 2014).


The cemetery lacks a fence. The holes are dug by hand by a team of 10 guys working for the Freetown City Council. I have to admit, it's a scary place, even in the light of day. My hope is the people buried here will be remembered and will rest in peace.


Sunday, September 28, 2014

A scary scenario... from Makeni, hometown of the president

Dozens of very sick people sat on the floor in an empty university building in central Sierra Leone.
They waited in filthy conditions.
With the nearest treatment center a 16-hour drive away in Kailahun, there is no way to treat the sick, despite the likelihood they are infected with Ebola.
According to Osman Bah, the Makeni government hospital director, Ebola cases have spiked in recent weeks.

“More than 100, 150 cases, because we have sent 56 patients to Kailahun,” he said. “This morning we have had more than 100-110 patients.”

This university complex is being used as a makeshift holding facility because the sick people have nowhere else to go.
Highly contagious patients lie in the open.
One woman sat on the floor, too sick to stand.
Other victims huddled together on beds.
One young child was laying alone.
They waited and hoped for a space in the next ambulance.
Growing numbers of Ebola outbreak hotspots are emerging in new locations across the country.
“We get phone calls every day from districts over the whole country, and those districts are absolutely overwhelmed,” said Axelle Vandoornick, a medical field coordinator for Doctors Without Borders.
There is no way of telling which patients are Ebola-positive.
Despite this, they are kept together.
“Ninety-nine percent of the cases that we have isolated are positive of Ebola,” said Bah, the medical director.
Medical staff at the containment center have little training or experience dealing with Ebola.
Protective equipment is inadequate.
One makeshift ward was empty.
Beds were filthy.
Pill packets sat among piles of clothes left by a departing patient.
Twenty-five confirmed Ebola patients left for Borders treatment center in Kailahun one recent night.
Four died during the 16-hour journey.
Doctors Without Borders’ Vandoornick said numbers are increasing.
“Every day we have ambulances arriving and when we open the door there are dead bodies inside the ambulance alongside non-cases potentially,” Vandoornick said. “So that is the first source of contamination.”

When two new patients were brought in to the center, one young boy showed symptoms for Ebola.
Despite the risk, his mother would not leave his side.
“It’s too much,” said Karimo Konteh, an ambulance driver. “Every day I pick up 10, 15, 14, 12 patients, everyday. ...”
Vandoornick said some districts have no Ebola treatment facilities of their own.

“They don't have [enough] capacity of Ebola centers in their district, so basically they are trying to send their patients to us,” Vandoornick said.

Bah, the medical director, said he is not hopeful the situation will improve.

“For now the situation is not under control,” he said. “We are hoping it will be better.
“But I am afraid, maybe it will get worse.”

Saturday, September 27, 2014

The Crisis Group says... and I respond...

CRISIS GROUP - STATEMENT
Statement on Ebola and Conflict in West Africa
Brussels, 23 September 2014:
The Ebola health crisis threatens to become a political crisis that could unravel years of effort to stabilise West Africa. The hardest-hit countries now face widespread chaos and, potentially, collapse. Adding social breakdown to the epidemic would create disaster perhaps impossible to manage. To avoid such a scenario, the international community must provide more personnel, resources and engagement not only to the immediate medical response but also to the longer-term problems of strengthening governance and rebuilding health-care systems. A high-level meeting this Thursday on the margins of the United Nations General Assembly will consider next steps. Yet the international community alone cannot carry the burden; strong decisions are needed from West Africa’s governments, chiefly on the reopening of borders.
In the three most affected countries – Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea – the Ebola epidemic has exposed citizens’ lack of trust in their governments and the grave potential for deep unrest in these already fragile societies. In all three countries, past civil conflicts fuelled by local and regional antagonisms could resurface. In Guinea, the government’s poor response has stoked historical tensions between the state and local communities in the forested areas of the south east, where the epidemic started. In Liberia, the hardest-hit with approximately half of the total deaths, and Sierra Leone, the governments have substituted a largely misguided military response for robust focus on medical needs. This should not come as a surprise. Security has been the main pillar of post-conflict reconstruction and governments are reacting with what is at their disposal: soldiers, not doctors. Before the epidemic, Liberia had just around 45 doctors for a population of 4.5 million; as the virus has spread, half of all health centres have been closed due to lack of medical staff.
Citizens are understandably terrified and increasingly desperate. In Liberia, protesters have blocked highways, looted clinics and attacked security forces. Eleven years after its civil war, Liberia faces the risk of a popular revolt against a fragile state that has been very slow to build key institutions, especially beyond the capital city of Monrovia. Frustration with the governments’ poor management of the crisis could trigger other grievances that political opponents could easily exploit.
States in the region need to find more allies. Religious leaders, traditional rulers and popular public figures should be involved in teaching people how to avoid Ebola, including by stopping (if temporarily) traditional practices that contribute to the virus’s spread, such as burial rituals or eating wild animals; they should also help raise awareness on the far greater risks faced by women, who traditionally tend to the sick. One regional newspaper recently urged its readers to  “revisit African beliefs, values and behaviour”. Meanwhile, eight people, including three journalists, were killed in Guinea “forestière” – the south east – by villagers fearing they were actually bringing the virus. This type of event could easily reignite violence in this region, where in July 2013 at least 200 people were killed and several hundred wounded due to ethnic clashes.
There will be more such incidents. The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation has warned of soaring food prices. Food and other shortages will cause unrest and force infected people to travel. States in the region must recognise that cooperating and dedicating their resources to helping their neighbours would be more effective than focusing on their own needs and concerns. Reopening the borders and putting in place appropriate surveillance measures must be the region’s top priority. This will allow affected countries to receive critical assistance, restart trade in basic commodities and facilitate the control of travellers, instead of having them cross the porous borders illegally and unobserved. But so far, and despite rhetoric to the contrary, West African governments have tried to manage these crises unilaterally, ignoring – as demonstrated once again by the rapid spread of Ebola – that their citizenries are deeply linked and interdependent. The Economic Community of West African States and the Mano River Union might offer the most effective coordination of regional relief activities.
The international community is at last ramping up its response, including in a comprehensive UN Security Council resolution on 18 September, co-sponsored by an unprecedented 131 countries. Up to now, the effort has largely been handled by overwhelmed medical staff and courageous NGOs and civil society organisations. The U.S. decision to send 3,000 military personnel to construct treatment centres and train health workers in Liberia is welcome. The UK is also providing further support to Sierra Leone and will soon set up a medical treatment centre near the capital, Freetown. China and Cuba are sending more medics to Sierra Leone and the former provided some assistance to Liberia. France has committed to opening a military hospital in Guinea.
This is a lot but unfortunately it will not be nearly enough. For example, the UN resolution says nothing about the two weak states that are close to the Ebola epicentre: Guinea-Bissau and The Gambia. Both have inadequate health systems and the virus could rapidly spread there. These countries should receive special attention; their governments should prepare to respond quickly when the virus emerges in their country.
The international community must allocate more personnel, resources and strategic planning not only to the medical response but also to the longer-term problems of food insecurity, political unrest and poor governance, to build resilience to these sorts of crises.  In the near term, the international community should consider holding an emergeny donors conference, including international financial institutions and health organisations, to coordinate action against a disease that indeed presents, as the resolution says, “a threat to international peace and security”. This should be done in close coordination with regional efforts by ECOWAS and other actors.
The disease first appeared in Zaïre – now the Democratic Republic of Congo – in 1976, and has since then resurfaced multiple times in different areas of the country, with the latest outbreak there ongoing. A long-term strategy, including sustained rebuilding of public health-care systems as the main aspect of improved governance, could go a long way in preventing this scenario from repeating itself in West Africa. It will be of limited use to intervene in Liberia if, when the epidemic is over, the country still has just 45 doctors. Ebola will simply come back.
 
 
To be honest... this statement isn't totally correct... 
 
The Ebola health crisis threatens to become a political crisis that could unravel years of effort to stabilise West Africa.”
 
Yes, this is true… many experts have said that this disease will expose the ills of the healthcare system, education system, governance structures, institutional strength, etc. AND, will set Salone back significantly… to possibly the period during or just after the war.
 
"The hardest-hit countries now face widespread chaos and, potentially, collapse. Adding social breakdown to the epidemic would create disaster perhaps impossible to manage."
 
Really???? There’s been little “chaos” here… except when villagers attacked a healthcare team... except when villagers blocked a road and restricted a burial team... except just recently when gas stations ran out of fuel… Yes, fuel shortages, as predicted earlier, have hit us here. Some of the decisions of the GoSL have been “chaotic” because they’re not well thought out and have resulted in even more mistrust of the government and leadership.
 
States in the region need to find more allies. Religious leaders, traditional rulers and popular public figures should be involved in teaching people how to avoid Ebola, including by stopping (if temporarily) traditional practices that contribute to the virus’s spread, such as burial rituals or eating wild animals; they should also help raise awareness on the far greater risks faced by women, who traditionally tend to the sick.”
 
The problem is that those leaders, rulers, public figures are mainly seen as corrupt and ignorant… by many in the country. Asking traditional leaders to do something won’t work… because people will do things anyway. Under the state of emergency, they’ll have to be forced to give up some practices.
 
"In the three most affected countries – Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea – the Ebola epidemic has exposed citizens’ lack of trust in their governments and the grave potential for deep unrest in these already fragile societies." 
 
Yes, that might be true... certainly the mistrust of the government is a real concern these days... and of course the APC are fighting for their own survival... but within the context of Ebola - everyone thinks the gov are stealing millions, which they probably are!!! Certainly groups like Health For All Coalition, Open Government Initiative, and others are padding their pockets very nicely. 
 
At the prisons, where visitors are now banned, inmates are going without food because families are not allowed in to visit or take food. Prison guards are padding their pockets by blackmailing families… and inmates.
 
"Citizens are understandably terrified and increasingly desperate." 
 
Terrified? I don't think so... not yet anyway... "Afraid", for sure... increasingly desperate? Maybe... 
 
"The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation has warned of soaring food prices. Food and other shortages will cause unrest and force infected people to travel."
 
Yes, this is true... food prices are skyrocketing... and shortages are already happening. 
 
"Reopening the borders and putting in place appropriate surveillance measures must be the region’s top priority. This will allow affected countries to receive critical assistance, restart trade in basic commodities and facilitate the control of travellers, instead of having them cross the porous borders illegally and unobserved."
 
Sierra Leone has just TIGHTENED it's borders with Guinea (a Pres advisor actually used the word, "closed") ... just yesterday. 

After the lock down...

Well, as expected, the government of Sierra Leone has declared the "ose-to-ose (house-to-house) Ebola tok (talk) sensitization campaign" a resounding success. Some officials openly graded the exercise saying, "we've achieved 80-90-100 percent success". The President even said the campaign achieved it's goals... and he declared it a success... "although not without its challenges". 

With such declarations... and the awarding of such high marks... I went back to a document issued from the Emergency Operations Centre (EOC) to see if the campaign really did meet it's objectives. 

Here's what the goals were... 

The goals of the 3-day period... According to the EOC. 
WHEN: 19th -21st September 2014.
WHY: There are 5 specific objectives:
1. To reach 100% of households with correct information on Ebola
2. To increase community acceptance of Ebola affected persons especially children
3. To promote hand washing with soap at household level (1.5 million bars of soap will be distributed)
4. To rebuild public confidence and trust in the health system
5. To install neighborhood watch structures at community level

Measuring success... Did 100% of households get a visit? Did the SLAJ/IRN and other radio programs help with that? Were victims and survivors de-stigmatized? Did 1.5 million households get soap? Do people now trust the healthcare system? Were neighbourhood watch programs set up? 

I don't know the answers to some of these questions... but I think it important to remember the intent and goals of this campaign.

My personal opinion... after reading reports and talking to many people is this... the campaign was "successful, small small", which means it was okay... but no where near the resounding success we're being fed.  

Most people obeyed the stay-at-home lock down. Most people stayed indoors or around their compounds. There were very few people on the main streets of Freetown. But, that wasn't a stated goal. 

I'd say... at this stage 100% of the population know that a deadly disease has struck Sierra Leone. Many people are not aware of the details... and some even attribute the presence of the disease to "God's punishment". They may not know much... but they know there's a disease in Sierra Leone... a disease that kills. I'd also say that radio has played a significant role in this goal... The SL Association of Journalists and the Independent Radio Network were on air for 13 hours a day over the 3-days. They added to the sensitization and awareness tremendously. So, I'd rate this goal as 75% because of the inaccurate messaging some have received. 

I don't think the 2nd goal was achieved... as many survivors and families of those who've died are still stigmatized and ostracized. Nurses are still being evicted by ignorant landlords. Burial teams are still not able to return to their homes. Even the rumour of an Ebola death instills fear amongst neighbours. I'd rate this goal as 25% successful. 

The 3rd goal... to promote hand-washing and distribute 1.5 million bars of soap... was completed although a lot of households didn't get any soap. Apparently, the "free" soap was a big deal... for obvious reasons, and some areas complained bitterly that there weren't enough bars of soap. Logistics for this aspect of the campaign were woefully weak... So, I'd have to say this goal was 50% successful. 

The 4rth goal was to rebuild public confidence and trust in the healthcare system. It's hard to measure... but I'd rate this goal a 25% as well. I'm still hearing about people who are pregnant, have malaria or even Ebola who are staying away from health centres, etc. because they're afraid. I'd be afraid too... given the state of those places and the lack of basic care being offered. 

Goal number 5 talks about a neighbourhood watch program. I haven't read anything about that... and don't know of any system that's been put in place. So, I'd rate this at 25% as well... In the neighbourhoods I frequent, including my own, there is no system for this. 

All in all, I wouldn't rate the campaign all that successful when considering the goals stated by the EOC. But here in Sierra Leone... if the President says it was a success... many people will believe it. And, life goes on... More misinformation. More propaganda. More misleading the public. More of the same... in other words. 

On the upside... I didn't read about anyone who starved during the lock down. And, "my" families and friends survived. Most of the country survived the 3-day campaign... and we'll wait to see more positive actions and results. Fingers crossed. 


Sunday, September 21, 2014

Lockdown - day three, Sunday, September 21, 2014

Another interesting day under the "ose-to-ose Ebola tok sensitization campaign". The President declared the three day "stay-at-home" period to help combat the Ebola disease. Much debate raged. Political lines were drawn. People gathered food and worried about their fates.

A rousing chorus of opposition arose from the religious communities - Muslims and Christians. The President asked each group to stay away from mosques and churches for the weekend. I thought this was interesting, given the highly religious nature of this country. The Inter-religious Council condoned the closure of institutions - but just this once, apparently.

But, as I walked through a small neighbourhood this morning, I could hear religious singing off in the distance. It was quiet, hushed and subdued but immediately recognizable. I rounded the corner of my friend's house and noticed a small group of people through the door of a neighbour's house. In this small community, neighbours had gathered to quietly defy the President... and secretly worship and pray for this country.

Not being a religious guy, my immediate thought was, "don't get caught". But, as Mary, my friend, came out of the house and explained... quietly, that they just decided to get together to pray and sing together. "We're afraid and we need to come together to pray. We need God to save this country."

I nodded and strolled back towards my little motorbike to make my rounds.

Saturday, September 20, 2014

Empty streets... phantom Freetown... day two

Day two... and the streets remain clear... as people obey the "stay at home" orders of the GoSL.

The beach road...


Lumley junction


Lumley round-about


Day two... more sadness

Day two of the ose-to-ose Ebola tok sensitization campaign began on a very sad note.

I was on my way to the Sierra Leone Association of Journalists and Independent Radio Network studios when I came across a small gathering of people and police. I stopped and could hear wailing from a nearby shop.

After making inquiries from a police officer, he told me they'd found another body. The wails were from a sister to the deceased... who was obviously distraught. Phone calls had been made to the Ebola hotline, 117, and other calls were made to health agencies. "Please come and remove this body," they all pleaded.

I asked permission from the family of the deceased if I could stay around and talk to people and take some photos. They agreed. However, I WON'T display the deceased pictures.

I visited the studio and told the presenter, Francis Sowa, about the body. He announced the location on the radio and called the manager of burial services. I felt totally helpless... as the family waited for a health or burial team. There was nothing else to do.

After working at the studio for some time, I left to go about my "rounds" of the phantom city. I went back to the scene where a health team had just arrived. I asked the local Member of Parliament, who'd shown up at the scene, Amadu Fofanah of Constituency 109, if I could talk to people and take more photos. He agreed. These are the photos of the team... spraying down before retrieving the body, bringing the body (in a body bag) out towards an awaiting truck... and then spraying down afterwards before removing protective gear.





Globe and Mail - September 20, 2014

Six million confined to their homes in Sierra Leone fight against Ebola

No one knew what to expect. Sierra Leoneans were told to prepare. The government promised increased resources, more treatment beds and needed information. International donors and aid organizations scrambled to adapt. The World Health Organization said it was supportive and that a three-day lockdown would help. Médecins sans frontières (Doctors Without Borders) opinions were largely negative, saying it would not contribute to the eradication of the Ebola virus disease. And opinion on the street was just as varied.
But it began Friday: an unprecedented nationwide shutdown that is meant to keep the six million people of this West African nation inside their homes for three days in an attempt to educate them about Ebola, find people afflicted by the virus and hopefully arrest its spread.
Here in the capital, all the shops along commercial streets were battened down and closed up. Normally bustling streets were empty. Police stood in groups watching blocked off roads and quiet neighbourhoods. Families gathered and watched movies, talked quietly and stayed on porches or indoors.
Some women cooked. Some men talked to their neighbours or listened to the radio. Children were subdued, and the capital city was hushed.
As I drove from one police checkpoint to the next, neighbourhoods were phantoms of what they normally are. Where I would normally see people gathered to talk Premier League Football, there were none. Where I would normally see women selling plantain and banana, there were none. Where the “dollar boys” – men who operate pocket foreign exchange services – hang out, there were none. It was spooky. But, it was also surreal.
It had rained all day Thursday. Heavy downpours known as “September rains” flooded roads and open gutters, subduing most shutdown preparations. But on the first day of the sensitization, it was sunny and warm. It was like the city had been cleansed of cars, bustle and people, leaving the remains of the city to bask in the sunlight.
But the undertones of the presence of the Ebola virus quickly darkened the day. I visited the Connaught Hospital in central Freetown late in the afternoon. Standing outside the gates of the entrance was Rosaline Momoh, the head matron. Idling noisily behind her was an ambulance with a hand-painted sign on the side that read: “Western Rural District.” The driver, clad in plastic protective gear, sat waiting for nurses to direct him backward as an Ebola patient was brought out of the isolation unit/holding centre.
The hospital administrator described how eight patients had arrived that day. Two have been admitted as “suspected” cases of Ebola. Blood samples were taken and sent to a laboratory. The six others were sent home to monitor their own conditions, which are very similar to malaria. They will report back to the hospital on Day 2 of the shutdown. “We have no beds,” Ms. Momoh said. “We hope to move some patients to another facility but for now we have no room. We have 19 beds and 19 patients.”
The volunteer teams spread out across Freetown, and their findings just on the first day were grim. “We saw five dead bodies suspected of having Ebola in the eastern part of the city. One was a young child,”Alhassan Kamara, a project officer with Health For All Coalition, an NGO working on monitoring the sensitization campaign, said.
When the Sierra Leone government announced the national lockdown two weeks ago, local journalists, activists, businesspeople and some ex-pats on the ground rabidly criticized the proposed action. In response, government spokespeople took to the airwaves and quickly rebranded the shutdown as an ose-to-ose, or house-to-house, Ebola sensitization campaign.” There was talk of shutting down the country for 21 days, the period of quarantine a suspected Ebola patient would undergo, but thankfully that idea fizzled. “We’re just thankful it’s only three days,” said Mary Kamara, a single mother who cares for eight children. “We’ll have to manage what we have.”
Many people still thought it a waste of time and money, especially after the government announced the process would cost $1.3-million (U.S.). Others prepared by raising prices on basic necessities like rice, pepper and onions. Most sat and worried. “We live on the small money my auntie makes as a petty trader,” said Isata Sesay, 16. “We won’t have food if she can’t sell.” Markets were flooded with people trying to stockpile whatever they could get for the little money at hand.
Before they had to hole up at home, survival was on everyone’s mind.
Ms. Kamara stressed over the many mouths she had to feed. Cyrilia Camara, 36, worried about food for her family. Nasuma Sherif would go without income from her small shop and was deciding what foodstuffs she would sell and which to hold onto. Kathleen Jalloh prayed she wouldn’t get sick. Saviour Diallo, a taxi driver, was eager to give his small car a rest. Isha Sesay, 18, wanted to gather notebooks to practise her mathematics. Cylena Kamara was stretching wool to braid her hair. Sullivan Kallon was negotiating for bags of charcoal for his wife to cook with.
Sierra Leone President Ernest Bai Koroma addressed the nation on Thursday evening over the largely state-run TV and radio broadcaster. “Our country is in the midst of a big trial,” he began. “But by the grace of God, we shall overcome this Ebola outbreak.”
His speech promised more treatment or holding facilities for patients suspected of having the virus, more ambulances, training healthcare workers, and providing for vulnerable children, the disabled community and street beggars. But for now, some in the government anticipate a 20-per-cent rise in the number of confirmed cases of Ebola as more people become aware of the sickness and sensitizers comb neighbourhoods asking about sick people and advising them to go to a hospital. It will take more than handwashing, sensitization and prayer to battle the Ebola virus. And it will probably take more than three days to get a grip on the future of this country.

Day two of "ose-to-ose Ebola tok sensitization campaign" in Sierra Leone

The streets are still quiet... but the sun is shining and hopefully all will be well.

The Sierra Leone Association of Journalists (SLAJ) and the Independent Radio Network are broadcasting all day... sharing important information on the campaign and the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD).

Proud to be a contributing member of the SLAJ organization.

In the studio...


In the workroom...


Friday, September 19, 2014

Phantoms of Freetown...


On Day One of the Sierra Leone national shut-down or
 "ose-to-ose Ebola tok sensitization campaign". 
September 19, 2014











Sunday, September 14, 2014

Preparing to "lock down" or "stay-at-home" in Sierra Leone

Preparations are well underway for the 3-4 day lock down or "ose-to-ose sensitization" or shut down or national sensitization days... or whatever one wants to call it. It's all the same, really, whatever it's called.
On the 18th - 21st of September, Sierra Leone will be shut down, locked down, shut in, at home... to ostensibly conduct house to house sensitization, give out bars of soap and look for sick people. The Ministry of Health are preparing isolation or holding facilities - community schools, if you believe the press - and are expecting a 20% increase in the numbers of confirmed cases of Ebola. Where they'll put those people... or bodies... is anyone's guess since the actual Ebola treatment facilities are still under construction or already full.
There's lots of preparations going on... training teams of "sensitizers", calling all police to be on high alert, blocking roads, printing materials to be given out, etc.
Personally, I think it's a "no win" situation.
I've been buying bags of rice for families... and other provisions... thanks to some very generous friends and family in Canada. THANK YOU, from the bottom of my heart. You all have saved countless women, children, aunties, uncles and grandmothers from some severe hardships. At least they'll have something to eat while being shut in for the looong weekend.
I'm trying to prepare some materials for these families... like activity ideas for children, puzzles and games, videos (if there's power), books, etc. It's going to be a LOOONG weekend.
Updates to follow.

Saturday, September 6, 2014

Preparing for a lock-down...

How to prepare for a national wide lock-down. 1) Cancel all meetings for those days. 2) Stock up on food items like rice, maggi, pepper, onions, etc. I'll post a complete shopping list soon. 3) Buy some new, pirated movies from Wilberforce St. 4) Visit Garrison St. to pick up some books. 5) Top up the NPA meter... or not. Buy candles. 6) Buy three bundles of drinking water. 7) fill the yellow "rubbers" with flushing water. 8) Stock the liquor cabinet, if you're inclined that way. 9) buy batteries for your radio and torchlight. 10) buy phone credits.
More suggestions are welcome...

Am I an okada rider... NO!

Last night (Friday) I happened to be out on my little motorbike around 8:00 p.m. I was stopped twice by the SL Police. At one location, St. John, the traffic police were courteous, polite and friendly. At St. John, the officers gathered around and said they saw me coming and thought I might be an okada rider. We shared a laugh and a brief chat... Then, they let me proceed without hassle after they saw I was not a commercial rider.
At the other location, Lumley, a young traffic officer was rude, pugnacious and arrogant. At Lumley, the traffic officer declared that all motorbikes were forbidden to be on the road after 7pm. I responded by quoting the President's speech in which Pres. Koroma banned okada riders after 7pm. The officer insisted... and took my driver's licence. After about 20 minutes of chatting... a senior inspector arrived... and immediately berated the young officer... and promptly returned my licence and let me go... home, where I was headed.
Sometimes I wish government communications were a little more specific... I ride a motorbike, which is sometimes called an okada. But, I am not a commercial rider. I carry a private licence number plate. I am insured as a private rider. I ride a slightly different motorbike than most of the commercial riders. Hmmm, how else can I prove I'm NOT an okada rider... but I am... just not a commercial okada rider.
Here is the relevant section from the President's speech and press release that followed... HIS EXCELLENCY ALSO PROCLAIMED A STATE OF PUBLIC EMERGENCY TO ENABLE US TAKE A MORE ROBUST APPROACH TO DEAL WITH THE EBOLA OUTBREAK.
PURSUANT TO SECTION 29(5) OF THE CONSTITUTION OF SIERRA LEONE ACT NO. 6 OF 1991, HIS EXCELLENCY THE PRESIDENT HEREBY MAKES THE FOLLOWING REGULATIONS TO COMPLEMENT THE MEASURES ALREADY IN FORCE:-
OKADA RIDERS IN ALL PARTS OF THE COUNTRY SHOULD OPERATE FROM 7 A.M. TO 7 P.M. DAILY;
ALL NIGHT CLUBS, CINEMAS AND VIDEO CENTRES SHOULD STOP THEIR ACTIVITIES WITH IMMEDIATE EFFECT;
ALL MUSHROOM HOSPITALS AND CLINICS SHOULD STOP THEIR OPERATIONS WITH IMMEDIATE EFFECT. A LIST OF SUCH ESTABLISHMENTS WILL BE PUBLISHED BY THE MINISTRY OF HEALTH AND SANITATION;

No say in the matter...

After hearing about the "Salone lock-down", yesterday, I still can't imagine why or how this decision was made. Of course, we've had no official notice of this... but based on Reuters and other international news reports, I guess it's official. Seems like a strange way to announce a country lock-down via social and international media... but we're living in strange times. 

There are still too many questions to be able to reasonably assess the impact of this lock-down. But, I really hope we get some answers... Q: how much will all this cost (21,000 people to move door-to-door)? Q: are essential workers to be exempt (police, nurses, etc.)? Q: is the GoSL going to provide food and care for the entire country for 3-4 days? Q: who's going to run the logistics of this operation? ... Oh, the questions!! Perhaps you have questions... is there any way to assemble those questions and put them to a GoSL or Emergency Operations Committee member? What's missing is feedback from the public... how can people have their say?


Thursday, September 4, 2014

Some of the local news...

Date: Monday, September 1, 2014
Publication: Concord Times
Headline: To stem new Ebola infections… Taxis and poda-podas to reduce passengers
Author: Patrick J. Kamara
Topic: Taxis to carry three passengers and poda-podas to carry one passenger per row

The Ministry of Transport and Aviation, with Sierra Leone Road Transport Authority (SLRTA), the Sierra Leone Police (SLP), Attitudinal and Behavioral Change (ABC) Secretariat and the Motor Drivers Union, has stated that starting on the 1st of September, all taxis should carry three passengers (1 in the front and 2 behind) and mini-buses (poda-podas) should carry one passenger per row. Also, transport owners should sacrifice 25% payment of rental fees, while mini-buses are to comply with overloading rules. Private vehicles are also included in this rule. National Traffic Coordinator, Superintendent Ambrose M. Sovula, said traffic police will be arresting drivers who contravene the new regulations. President of the Drivers Union, Alpha A. Bah, said this would have a huge impact on the transportation sector as vehicle owners might prefer to park their vehicles. 

Date: Monday, September 1, 2014
Publication: Awoko
Headline: Kenema health workers down tools
Author: Saffa Moriba
Topic: Nurses strike in Kenema

Nurses and healthcare workers at the Kenema Ebola treatment centre went on strike on Saturday after the death of another colleague. Dr. Rogers had died the day prior. The nurses were protesting over the lack of pay (Le250,000/week). Dr. Christian Pratt, Medical Superintendent said he was trying to allocate monies.

Date: Tuesday, September 2, 2014
Publication: Premier News
Headline: Bible cure for Ebola
Author: Esme James
Topic: Ebola pestilence a punishment from god and confession and appreciation will overcome

In the religious corner of the newspaper, under a Christian Perspective, this article talks about Jesus and god crushing enemies and spiritual power to overcome any pestilence that confronts people. Ebola is a pestilence, punishment for sin and disobedience but the solution is confession and thank god for mercy.
Ed Note: This is an example of what some in the religious community are preaching.