Categories: News

Sierra Leone Ebola Burial Teams Face Extreme Danger But Persevere

The spread of Ebola in the West African region has been devastating. With the numbers of victims succumbing to the virus rising rapidly, the country of Sierra Leone has employed roving burial teams who risk their lives to handle the dead bodies and hopefully curtail spread of the disease.

RELATED: Ebola Patient Videotaped Escaping in to Crowded Marketplace

Keep Up With Face2Face Africa On Facebook!

These workers, also known as the “burial boys,” who don protective suits to carry out the burials, are paid just $100 per month. With fear and misunderstanding carrying over in to the region, these teams are working against time as the virus is outpacing efforts to combat the spread. This group of brave men have put their dreams on hold as they try to stave off the crisis that has rocked their country.

Sierra Leonese burial team members are disinfected after loading the bodies of Ebola victims onto a truck at the Médecins sans Frontières facility in Kailahun. Photograph: Carl De Souza/AFP/Getty Images

The Guardian writes:

In desperation, 20 young men signed up for the burial teams, each paid $100 (£61) a month for the task. “Hunger is killing more people than Ebola,” said Abraham Kamara, 21, a fellow digger. They work to rigorous standards enforced by the Red Cross, but pay a heavy price.

“When I’m passing, people I know say, ‘don’t come near me’!” Jusson said. He looked skyward for a moment before continuing: “I try to explain to them. If we don’t volunteer to do this, there’ll be nobody to bury the dead bodies because all of us will be infected.”

The burial team’s battle for acceptance is a reflection of a wider struggle. Amid fear, confusion and conflicting public health messages surrounding West Africa’s first recorded encounter with Ebola, Kailahun and its surrounding chiefdoms must make decisions that will be vindicated by time or become tragic missteps.

Medical staff working with Médecins sans Frontières put on their protective gear before entering an isolation area at the Ebola treatment centre in Kailahun. Photograph: Reuters

The suits keep workers like Alfred Jusson and others safe as they’re working to bury the dead, but there is still danger of contracting the disease when they remove their suits. Ebola is spread via bodily fluids, and there is extreme risks involved at all times.

The Guardian reports:

As they scour villages deep in the tropical forests, the burial team rely on spaceman-like suits for protection. If a bag of flour were poured over them, the suits should prevent even one grain touching their skin. But once the job is done, these very suits become a danger – they have to be removed without a grain of that flour getting on them.

Which makes the young men’s efforts all the more heroic.

One of the workers, Andrew Neyuma, just 17 years old, said about his work, “I want to kick Ebola out of this country. Our population is already very small and Ebola wants to reduce it? No way!” Still, workers, such as Jusson, face push-back not just from the public but also from concerned family members.

On one day on his way to work, Jusson found himself running late, because his mother tried to get him to quit, “Forget about this job,” she had pleaded. “Qualified doctors and nurses have been dying. So who are you, that you think you’re not going to die if you’re doing this?”

“The truth is, no one in [the capital] Freetown wanted to come here and do this job,” said Daniel James, the Red Cross team leader in Kailahun.”Eventually my colleagues said, ‘You’re from Kailahun, you go.'”

While many of the nation’s residents are shunning the Red Cross workers, others are accepting of their efforts and are reaching out to them to find methods to combat the Ebola spread.

Since March, Ebola has claimed more than 1,900 lives, and the World Health Organization predicts that about 18,000 more people could be infected before the virus is contained.

SEE ALSO: Poem: Jagulabi vs. Digbolugi

D.L. Chandler

D.L. Chandler is a veteran of the Washington D.C. Metro writing scene, working as a journalist, reporter and culture critic. Getting his start in the late 1990s in print, D.L. joined the growing field of online reporting in 1998. His first big break came with the now-defunct Politically Black in 1999, the nation's first Black political news portal. D.L. has worked in the past for OkayPlayer, MTV News, Metro Connection and several other publications and magazines. D.L., a native Washingtonian, resides in the Greater Washington area.

Recent Posts

‘It felt really scary’ – 14-year-old Nigerian ballet sensation on learning he’s largely blind in one eye

Anthony Madu, the 14-year-old Nigerian dancer from Lagos who gained admission to a prestigious ballet…

8 hours ago

‘I remember the day when 56 dollars would change my life’: Wayne Brady reveals humble beginnings

Actor-host Wayne Brady recently opened up about his early financial struggles in his now thriving…

8 hours ago

This 1-year-old loves to greet people at Target, so the store hired him as its youngest employee

Mia Arianna, also known as @mia.ariannaa on TikTok, helped her son become an honorary team…

9 hours ago

Postman drives 379 miles at his own expense to deliver lost World War II letters to a family

Alvin Gauthier, a Grand Prairie USPS postman, recently went above and beyond to brighten a…

12 hours ago

Maj. Gen. Fatuma Gaiti Ahmed becomes Kenya’s first-ever female air force head

Maj. Gen. Fatuma Gaiti Ahmed is the first female commander of the air force and…

13 hours ago

All Benjamin E. Mays High School seniors gain admission to HBCU Morris Brown College in surprise announcement

Benjamin E. Mays High School brought together its 272 senior class members for a meeting…

15 hours ago

Meet the formerly incarcerated single mom who has gone viral for passing bar exam on first try

Afrika Owes' emotional response to learning that she had passed the bar exam on her…

16 hours ago

New York attorney accused of hiring hitman to kill Zimbabwean ex-wife sentenced

A 49-year-old New York attorney was on April 26 sentenced to 10 years in federal…

17 hours ago

Cher, 77, who is dating 38-year-old Alexander Edwards, explains why she dates younger men

During an appearance on The Jennifer Hudson Show on Wednesday, pop legend Cher opened up…

17 hours ago

11-year-old accidentally shot to death by 14-year-old brother with stolen gun

Authorities in Florida said an 11-year-old boy was accidentally shot and killed by his 14-year-old…

18 hours ago

16-year-old Ethiopian Hana Taylor Schlitz breaks sister’s record to become the youngest graduate from TWU

The famous Taylor Schlitz family is making headlines once more as the youngest of the…

1 day ago

Tahra Grant is reportedly the first Black woman to be Chief Comms Officer at a major Hollywood studio

Sony Pictures Entertainment has appointed Tahra Grant as its Chief Communications Officer. She replaces Robert…

1 day ago

How Ashley Fox quit her Wall Street job and built a startup to financially empower those Wall Street would never talk to

Meet Ashley M. Fox, the founder of Empify and the first in her family to…

1 day ago

‘It wasn’t worth it’ – Tyra Banks says the first time she drank alcohol was when she was 50

Tyra Banks, the iconic former host of Dancing With the Stars, has made a delightful…

1 day ago

Brazilian woman who wheeled dead uncle to bank to withdraw his money is being investigated for manslaughter

A Brazilian woman named Érika de Souza, 42, is under investigation for manslaughter after authorities…

2 days ago