Ebola outbreak: Sierra Leone declared free of disease
Sierra Leone has officially been declared free of Ebola by the
World Health Organization (WHO).
Thousands
of people took to the streets of the capital, Freetown, at the stroke of
midnight - marking 42 days without a single declared case of the disease.
There
were further cheers when the WHO local representative made the official
announcement later on Saturday.
The
outbreak killed almost 4,000 people in Sierra Leone over the past 18 months.
Ebola deaths
|
Figures up to 1
November 2015
|
11,314
Deaths - probable, confirmed and suspected
(Includes
one in the US and six in Mali)
·
4,808 Liberia
·
3,955 Sierra
Leone
·
2,536 Guinea
·
8 Nigeria
Source: WHO
Many gathered around
a giant cotton tree in the centre of the city. Some lit candles in memory of
the victims, while others danced with joy.
Dr
Oliver Johnson, from the King's Sierra Leone partnership, worked at an Ebola
clinic in Freetown, and has strong links with medical professionals there.
"[For]
everyone I've spoken to, there's a sense of relief that this might finally be
over and maybe a bit of disbelief that after so many false starts, or false
ends, we might finally be there," he told the BBC.
A
country is considered free of human-to-human transmission once two 21-day
incubation periods have passed since the last known case tested negative for a
second time.
Many gathered around a giant cotton tree in the centre of the city. Some lit candles in memory of the victims, while others danced with joy.
Dr Oliver Johnson, from the King's Sierra Leone partnership, worked at an Ebola clinic in Freetown, and has strong links with medical professionals there.
"[For] everyone I've spoken to, there's a sense of relief that this might finally be over and maybe a bit of disbelief that after so many false starts, or false ends, we might finally be there," he told the BBC.
A country is considered free of human-to-human transmission once two 21-day incubation periods have passed since the last known case tested negative for a second time.
At the scene: Tulip Mazumdar, BBC News, Freetown
This is the moment Sierra Leone has been waiting for. Thousands of people took to the streets of the capital on the run-up to midnight.
Women's groups came together to organise a march through the city centre; the final point was a 600-year-old cotton tree which sits on a huge roundabout. Usually, the area is jammed with cars, but last night it was packed with people. Some held up candles, others jumped around dancing and a military band led the procession through the city.
There were waves of celebrations, and then silence as names of some of the dead were beamed on to a screen. Health workers in particular were honoured for their bravery and sacrifice, they were some of the first to die when Ebola struck. Today is an enormous milestone for Sierra Leoneans, and people are overjoyed. But this historic moment is bittersweet.
Sierra Leone President Ernest Bai Koroma is due to address crowds in the city later,
He said his government did at the time what it could do and did not have the knowledge to fight the disease.
He said his government had to put up with the delays because international organisations such as the WHO "were the experts".
Neighbouring Liberia was declared Ebola-free in September following 4,800 deaths there.
A handful of cases are still being reported in neighbouring Guinea. Sierra Leone has said it will take heightened security and health screening measures at their shared border.
23 March 2015 8 October 2015
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