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Sunday, 19 October 2014
CRY OVER EBOLA: Liberian President Writes To The World On Ebola
Liberia has suffered the worst of the current
Ebola outbreak and President Ellen Johnson
Sirleaf has written a touching letter to the
world to ask for help and support.
Liberian President, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf has
written a touching letter to the world to ask for
help in putting an end to the Ebola outbreak
which has brought her country to its knees.
The current outbreak has been described by the
World Health Organization as the worst ever
and it has claimed the lives of over 2000
Liberians.
The president’s letter was read on radio and
transmitted all over the world. Read it below:
Dear World
In just over six months, Ebola has managed to
bring my country to a standstill. We have lost over
2,000 Liberians. Some are children struck down in
the prime of their youth. Some were fathers,
mothers, brothers or best friends. Many were
brave health workers that risked their lives to
save others, or simply offer victims comfort in
their final moments.
There is no coincidence Ebola has taken hold in
three fragile states – Liberia, Sierra Leone and
Guinea - all battling to overcome the effects of
interconnected wars. In Liberia, our civil war
ended only eleven years ago. It destroyed our
public infrastructure, crushed our economy and
led to an exodus of educated professionals.
A country that had some 3,000 qualified doctors
at the start of the war was dependent by its end
on barely three dozen. In the last few years,
Liberia was bouncing back. We realized there was
a long way to go, but the future was looking
bright.
Now Ebola threatens to erase that hard work. Our
economy was set to be larger and stronger this
year, offering more jobs to Liberians and raising
living standards. Ebola is not just a health crisis –
across West Africa, a generation of young people
risk being lost to an economic catastrophe as
harvests are missed, markets are shut and
borders are closed.
The virus has been able to spread so rapidly
because of the insufficient strength of the
emergency, medical and military services that
remain under-resourced and without the
preparedness to confront such a challenge. This
would have been the case whether the
confrontation was with Ebola, another infectious
disease, or a natural disaster.
But one thing is clear. This is a fight in which the
whole world has a stake. This disease respects no
borders. The damage it is causing in West Africa,
whether in public health, the economy or within
communities – is already reverberating
throughout the region and across the world.
The international reaction to this crisis was
initially inconsistent and lacking in clear direction
or urgency. Now finally, the world has woken up.
The community of nations has realized they
cannot simply pull up the drawbridge and wish
this situation away.
This fight requires a commitment from every
nation that has the capacity to help – whether
that is with emergency funds, medical supplies or
clinical expertise.
I have every faith in our resilience as Liberians,
and our capacity as global citizens, to face down
this disease, beat it and rebuild. History has
shown that when a people are at their darkest
hour, humanity has an enviable ability to act with
bravery, compassion and selflessness for the
benefit of those most in need.
From governments to international organisations,
financial institutions to NGOs, politicians to
ordinary people on the street in any corner of the
world, we all have a stake in the battle against
Ebola. It is the duty of all of us, as global citizens,
to send a message that we will not leave millions
of West Africans to fend for themselves against an
enemy that they do not know, and against whom
they have little defence.
The time for talking or theorizing is over. Only
concerted action will save my country, and our
neighbours, from experiencing another national
tragedy. The words of Henrik Ibsen have never
been truer: “A thousand words leave not the
same deep impression as does a single deed.
Yours sincerely,
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf
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