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Friday, 19 September 2014

Mob Kills Officials In Guinue Due To Fear Of Ebola



The bodies of eight officials and
journalists who went to a remote
village in Guinea to dispel rumors
about the deadly Ebola outbreak
gripping the region were discovered
after a rock-hurling mob attacked the
delegation, claiming that it had come
to spread the illness, a government
spokesman said Thursday.
The delegation had left for the village
on Tuesday for what was supposed to
be a community event to raise
awareness about the Ebola virus, said
the spokesman, Albert Camara
Damantang. When the angry crowd
descended on them, he said, several
officials managed to escape and alert
their colleagues in Conakry, Guinea’s
capital, who sent out a search party.
“They went on a mission to try to
sensitize the local population about
Ebola, but unfortunately they were
met with hostility by people throwing
rocks,” Mr. Damantang said.
In the delegation was a sub-prefect, a
regional health director and a pastor
“who came to offer solace, as well as
several journalists from communal
radio stations,” Mr. Damantang said.
“Among the only survivors we found
of those who tried to hide in the bush
was the 5-year-old son of the sub-
prefect, who was left hiding in the
wild.”
The Ebola epidemic has already killed
more than 2,600 people in Guinea,
Liberia and Sierra Leone.
Governments have scrambled to figure
out a way to contain it, but beyond
their own limited resources, collapsing
health systems and inexperience with
the disease, they have faced another
dangerous obstacle: distrust among
the local population.
In Guinea, workers and officials,
blamed by panicked populations for
spreading the virus, have been
threatened with knives, stones and
machetes.
In Liberia, some politicians have
publicly expressed doubts about the
extent of the outbreak, and even
accused the administration of
exaggerating it to collect money from
international donors.
Scores of health workers across the
region have died trying to fight the
disease, often in hospitals and clinics
that lack basic supplies. But the killing
of government officials, journalists
and community leaders trying to curb
the spread of the disease represents a
dangerous new chapter in the efforts
to contain the epidemic.

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