Sierra Leone bans Christmas and New Year gatherings over Ebola risk
Source: Guardian
Christmas and New Year gatherings have been banned by the government throughout Sierra Leone for fear the Ebola virus will be spread to rural villages as people go home to celebrate.
The edict, which will be enforced by the army, means those who live in the capital, Freetown, will be barred from travelling to join their extended families. The citys residents account for a third of the countrys population. A lock-down is reported to also be happening in nearby Port Loko, which is the other big urban area with soaring cases.
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Military personnel will be on the streets at Christmas and the New Year to stop any street celebrations.
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Public gatherings are already banned to avoid contagion.
Schools are closed across the three west African countries where the epidemic is raging Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea disrupting the education of five million children. Bars and clubs are closed. Football games are among the sports caught up in the ban. Churches have been allowed to hold services, but must separate the members of the congregation.
Travel is already greatly restricted in Sierra Leone by night-time curfews enforced by army checkpoints. Many villages and even whole districts where Ebola cases have occurred are quarantined for 21 days by which time anybody infected would show symptoms. Some villages have been quarantined for months as one case occurs a couple of weeks after another.
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Read more: http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/dec/12/sierra-leone-christmas-gatherings-banned-ebola