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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Sierra Leone lifts three-day Ebola curfew

Los Angeles Times

At least 130 Ebola cases were identified and scores of bodies buried during a three-day curfew in Sierra Leone, the country’s health authorities said Monday, calling the controversial effort largely successful.

In one of the most aggressive moves yet to stem the virus spreading through parts of West Africa, Sierra Leone’s 6 million people were ordered to stay home around the clock while about 30,000 health care workers and volunteers went door to door to educate about Ebola and find people who might be spreading the deadly disease.

The aim of the campaign was to overcome the fear and distrust that have kept many sick people from reporting symptoms of the virus, which is spread through contact with the bodily fluids of victims.

Humanitarian workers warned that it could have the opposite effect, increasing suspicion of the health authorities and driving the disease underground. But Stephen Gaojia, who heads the country’s Ebola Emergency Operations Center, told the BBC that the receptiveness of Sierra Leoneans was “overwhelming.”

More than 1 million households were visited during the curfew, which ended late Sunday – about 75 percent of the homes authorities had hoped to reach, according to figures released by the Health Ministry.

Although the full results of the effort won’t be announced until today, Gaojia told the BBC that at least 130 new cases had been confirmed and results were pending on 39 suspected cases.

Authorities also buried at least 77 bodies, half of which tested positive for Ebola, Abdulai Bayraytay, a government spokesman, told the Associated Press.

A Spanish priest who caught Ebola while working as a medical director at a Sierra Leone hospital was flown to Madrid on Monday for treatment, news reports said. Manuel Garcia Viejo is the second Spanish missionary to become infected in the current outbreak. Miguel Pajares, who tested positive for Ebola while working in Liberia, was flown back to Spain and treated with the experimental drug ZMapp. But he died last month.

Also Monday, a nurse was flown to Switzerland for observation after he was bitten by an infected child while working for an international organization in Sierra Leone, Swiss news reports said. The man, who was not identified, was wearing protective clothing at the time, and the risk of infection was believed to be low.