BUSTLING ON A NORMAL DAY BUT EMPTY DUE TO THE LOCKDOWN
A three-day curfew
is under way in Sierra Leone to let health workers find and isolate cases of
Ebola, in order to halt the spread of the disease.
Many people have
been reluctant to seek medical treatment for Ebola, fearing that diagnosis
might mean death as there is no proven cure.
A team of 30,000
people is going house-to-house to find those infected and distribute soap.
Meanwhile in
neighbouring Guinea, the bodies of eight missing health workers and journalists
involved in the Ebola campaign have been found.
A government
spokesman said some of the bodies had been recovered from a
septic tank in the village of Wome. The team had been attacked by villagers on
Tuesday.
Guinea's prime
minister said an investigation was under way, and vowed to catch the
perpetrators of the "heinous murders".
VOLUNTEERS TO VISIT EACH HOME TO TEST PEOPLE FOR THE EBOLA VIRUS
Correspondents say
many villagers are suspicious of official attempts to combat the disease and
the incident illustrates the difficulties health workers face.
Sierra Leone is one
of the countries worst hit by West Africa's Ebola outbreak, with more than 550
victims among the 2,600 deaths so far recorded.
In the capital,
Freetown, normally bustling streets were quiet, with police guarding
roadblocks.
During the curfew,
30,000 volunteers will look for people infected with Ebola, or bodies, which
are especially contagious.
They will hand out
bars of soap and information on preventing infection.
Officials say the
teams will not enter people's homes but will call emergency services to deal
with patients or bodies.
Volunteers will
mark each house with a sticker after they have visited it, reports say.
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