Health
officials in Sierra Leone have discovered scores of bodies in a remote
diamond-mining area, raising fears that the scale of the Ebola outbreak
may have been underreported.
The World Health Organization said they uncovered a "grim scene" in the eastern district of Kono. A WHO response team had been sent to Kono to investigate a sharp rise in Ebola cases.
Ebola has killed 6,346 people in West Africa, with more than 17,800 infected. Sierra Leone has the highest number of Ebola cases in West Africa, with 7,897 cases since the beginning of the outbreak.
Ebola deaths in West AfricaUp to 3 - 6 December -6,346 Deaths - probable, confirmed and suspected (Includes one in the US and six in Mali)
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3,177 Liberia
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1,742 Sierra Leone
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1,412 Guinea
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8 Nigeria
Source: WHO
The WHO said in a statement on Wednesday
that over 11 days in Kono, "two teams buried 87 bodies, including a
nurse, an ambulance driver, and a janitor drafted into removing bodies
as they piled up".
Dr Olu Olushayo, a member of the WHO's Ebola response team, said: "Our team met heroic doctors and nurses at their wits' end, exhausted burial teams and lab techs, all doing the best they could but they simply ran out of resources and were overrun with gravely ill people." Health officials are worried that many of the Ebola cases in Kono have gone unreported until now.
"We are only seeing the ears of the hippo," said Dr Amara Jambai, Sierra Leone's Director of Disease Prevention and Control. The district of more than 350,000 inhabitants had reported 119 cases up to 9 December.
Authorities in Sierra Leone have decided to put Kono district on "lockdown" from 10 to 23 December to try and contain the outbreak.
During the lockdown, no-one will be able to enter or leave the district but they can move around freely within it.
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