Liberia's president has sacked 10 government
officials for failing to return to the West African nation and lead the
fight against the deadly Ebola outbreak that has killed more than 1,100
Liberians.
President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf dismissed the senior officials, who
include six assistant ministers, two deputy ministers and two
commissioners, late on Saturday, for being "out of the country without
an excuse", a statement from the president's office said.
"These government officials showed insensitivity to our national tragedy and disregard for authority," it added.
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Infographic: Just how deadly is Ebola? |
They were initially told in August to return to the country.
Liberia has been hit hard by the Ebola epidemic, with more than 1,137
recorded deaths out of 2,081 cases, more than half of them in the last
three weeks.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has warned that the epidemic is
spreading exponentially in Liberia, where more than half of the deaths
have been recorded. It has said that thousands are at risk of contagion
in the coming weeks.
The contagious, haemorrhagic fever was first discovered in eastern
Guinea in March and has since killed more than 2,400 people, making it
the worst Ebola outbreak in history.
The dreaded virus has taken a particularly heavy toll on healthcare
workers who have stationed themselves on the front lines of the fight,
operating in fragile healthcare systems that have been stretched to
breaking point.
Sierra Leonean doctor dies
A fourth Sierra Leonean doctor died on Sunday after contracting the
disease, as a Dutch charity repatriated two doctors suspected of having
been contaminated with the virus.
Olivette Buck was head of the Lumley Health Centre in a densely
populated suburb west of the capital Freetown. She tested positive for
the virus on Tuesday, apparently contracting it as she treated an Ebola
patient.
"I can confirm that doctor Olivette Buck died between last night and
this morning," Jarrah Kawusu-Konteh, of the State House communication
unit, told Reuters.
Meanwhile, two Dutch doctors who may have been contaminated have been
repatriated to the Netherlands, and are undergoing tests to confirm
whether or not they have the disease, a spokeswoman for the foundation
they work for has said.
More than 300 health workers have become infected with Ebola in
Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone. Nearly half of them have died,
according to the WHO.
The infections have exacerbated shortages of doctors and nurses in
West African countries that were already low on skilled health
personnel.
So far, only foreign health and aid workers have been evacuated abroad from Sierra Leone and Liberia for treatment.
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