Categories: News

Sierra Leonean Businessman Uses Resources & Wits To Keep His Village Ebola-Free, Making It Only Area Not Infected in Country

Momoh Konte is not an medical expert. He is a businessman running TransTech International, which has an office in Freetown, Sierra Leone. He used his money and organizational skills to fight Ebola. (Photo by Tanya Bindra for The Washington Post)

When the news hit that Ebola had mysteriously appeared in Guinea back in March, 43-year-old Momoh Konte (pictured), a successful businessman who lives in Washington, D.C., wondered how he could keep the people of his district safe. And after four months of spearheading his own Ebola-free program, his district of Koinadugu remains the last one in Sierra Leone to be Ebola-free.

RELATED: Sierra Leone Football Team Subjected to Ebola Discrimination, Humiliation During Africa Cup

Keep Up With Face2Face Africa On Facebook!

After watching the news about Ebola’s emergence, Konte, who is responsible for helping privatizing telecommunications in Sierra Leone, made an important observation about the virus, “The whole idea is it’s not killing rich people, it’s not killing middle-class people — it’s killing poor people who move from one place to another looking for work or something to eat.”

So in June, he traveled to Koinadugu — which is the largest district of Sierra Leone’s 14 districts and has a reported population of  265,000 residents — with large drums of chlorine, face masks, thousands of rubber gloves, and a plan.

His plan involved donating 10 million Sierra Leone dollars (about $2,300) on a monthly basis to the area in order to replenish the items he initially traveled with.

The next step was getting key leaders on his page and creating a number of tasks forces.

The Washington Post reports:

Konte’s first step was convincing district politicians, along with the important traditional tribal leaders, that they could not wait for help. And he needed their support.

He was persuasive and, especially important, willing to spend money. He organized a district Ebola task force, gave each of the 10 members a stipend and appointed a former Doctors Without Borders official named Fasineh Samura as the head. Together, they set out to implement Konte’s plans.

The subsequent step — and likely one of the most critical — involved enforcing strict restrictions  on the mobility of residents outside the district.

The Washington Post reports:

The strictest measure was to draw a ring around the district and restrict who went in or out. The mountains helped. But so did checkpoints, where guards stood armed with thermal thermometers and chlorinated water — and a pass system that prevented most residents from leaving. Visitors needed a local resident to vouch for them.

Not surprisingly, the “pass laws” weren’t very popular, with some even maligning the new measures over radio.

But Konte held the line.

When some small business owners complained about not being able to make supply runs, Konte, who runs an economic consulting business company called “Transtech International,” used his business expertise to solve the problem by creating a $45,000 revolving fund for loans on importing food, medicine, and fuel.

He also helped coordinate a task force to manage deliveries.

The district’s vegetable growers, the country’s primary produce supplier, were forced to share a small, communal fleet of trucks to ship their goods. And instead of these trucks being stuffed with five people, each carried one driver and one or two people called “manifesters” who tracked the shipments and payments.

Another integral step included engaging the community at all levels. Konte made sure neighborhood watch teams were set up in each chiefdom. He also educated community leaders heading motorcycle taxi drivers, market women, and local nonprofits, effectively passing the baton of responsibility all around.

One of the most important people to target, though, were faith leaders. With the first cases of Ebola in Sierra Leone coming from funeral attendees of a faith leader’s burial, Konte wanted to make sure these respected figures were also fully informed.

“When it comes to traditional African healers, we had to pay extra attention,” Konte says. “People trust them. They are popular. A faith healer with Ebola could be disastrous. It would’ve wiped out our community.”

And so far, Koinadugu has persevered disease-free, even as nearby communities continue to suffer deaths all around them. For example, the town of Makeni, which is reportedly an hour away, has reportedly suffered an “explosion” of new infections.

Which is why Konte insists, “You cannot have comfort and take care of this Ebola thing.”

RELATED: Sudanese Patient Succumbs to Ebola in Germany

Abena Agyeman-Fisher

Abena Agyeman-Fisher is the Editor-in-Chief of Face2Face Africa. Most recently, she worked for Interactive One as the Senior Editor of NewsOne, she worked for AOL as the News Programming Manager of Black Voices, which later became HuffPo Black Voices, and for the New York Times Company as an Associate Health Editor. Abena, a Spelman College graduate, has been published in Al Jazeera, the Daily Beast, New Jersey’s The Star-Ledger, the Grio, BlackVoices, West Orange Patch, About.com, the Source, Vibe, Vibe Vixen, Jane, and Upscale Magazines. She has interviewed top celebrities, icons, and politicians, such as First Lady Michelle Obama, Senior Advisor to the President Valerie Jarrett, Civil Rights activist and diplomat Andrew Young, comedian Bill Cosby, Grammy Award-winning singer Jill Scott, actress and singer Queen Latifah, Olympic Gold winner Cullen Jones, international supermodel Alek Wek, and five-division world champion boxer Floyd Mayweather. Most recently, she served as the First Lady’s press reporter during President Barack Obama’s U.S.-Africa Summit, Young African Leaders Institute event, and the 2013 presidential trip to Senegal, Johannesburg, Cape Town, and Tanzania. Abena is also a 2015 International Women's Media Foundation Africa Great Lakes Fellow, where she reported on women candidates and Chinese sweatshops in Tanzania for CNN and Refinery29.

View Comments

  • I am thoroughly impressed with Momoh Konte ACTIONS and CONCERNS for the district of Koinadugu. Each step in THAT plan was WISE in order to help protect the area from a disease that was impartial to any person; also, things such as a supply of masks, gloves, and chlorine made such a HUGE difference. I'm thankful to God for giving him a willing heart to CARE, the ABILITY to follow through, and FINANCE to help create RESOLVE. This goes to show that when God gives a person a wisdom and finance...it is to be used for the People's GOOD.

  • This is the kind of man that Sierra Leone would like to have as future President. What he did for his people in Koinadugu District, shows how much love he got for his people. God bless my brother.

Recent Posts

Mike Tyson says he’s avoiding sex with his wife as he prepares for the Jake Paul fight

Boxing legend Mike Tyson is not taking any chances as he prepares for his July…

10 mins ago

LeBron James uncertain over his future at LA Lakers after playoff loss to the Denver Nuggets

LeBron James has cast uncertainty over his future with the Lakers by declining to confirm…

17 mins ago

Florida: Four teens die after crashing suspected stolen car during police chase

Four Florida teenagers were killed after they crashed a suspected stolen car during a police…

41 mins ago

8th grader rescues students on school bus after their driver passes out

When their school bus driver experienced a medical emergency, Acie Holland III came to the…

2 hours ago

‘Why is life so unfair and merciless?’ – Francis Ngannou mourns death of 15-month-old son Kobe

Former UFC heavyweight champion cum professional boxer Francis Ngannou took to social media on Monday…

6 hours ago

This Sudanese teen has tried to cross the Channel to Britain on a small boat over 100 times to see his mother

A 17-year-old migrant from Sudan, Abdul Usman, has attempted to cross the Channel from France…

20 hours ago

How these under-11-year-old sisters are making history in Maryland as CEOs

Tatiyana, Danyelle LaShay, and Jyniah Smith -- the Smith sisters -- are some of the…

21 hours ago

Mother-daughter duo set to graduate from nursing school in full circle moment

It's a full circle moment for mom Tangenicka "Tange" Williams and her daughter Chyna set…

23 hours ago

Fat Joe recalls how his followers made him lose $2 million

Fat Joe is widely known for hits like Lean Back, All the Way Up, and…

1 day ago

From his living room, he launched a software company that recently raised $20m with clients like Ford

Get to know Jordan Taylor; he is the founder of Vizcom, a software company that…

1 day ago

Mother charged after children walk more than a mile to Walmart alone

38-year-old Tanice Spence-Clarke was arrested and charged with child neglect without physical harm after police…

1 day ago

Janet Jackson reveals she came close to playing Storm in ‘X-Men’ before the role went to Halle Berry

Janet Jackson might have wielded superpowers alongside Marvel's iconic heroes. But, it was Halle Berry…

1 day ago

‘I would haunt your family for the rest of your life’ – Teacher allegedly threatened student who recorded him using racial slur

A North Carolina mother wants a middle school teacher to be terminated after he allegedly…

1 day ago

Tiffany Haddish claims Common pursued her for two years before she agreed to date him

In a recent interview with PEOPLE ahead of the release of her Curse You With…

1 day ago

King Charles orders Jamaican govt to pay Vybz Kartel’s legal bills after successful conviction appeal

Authorities in the United Kingdom have ordered the Jamaican government to pay the legal bills…

1 day ago