Liberia's President,
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf has written a heartfelt letter to the world over the
Ebola crisis that hit her country. In the letter which was read over the radio
and transmitted worldwide, she likened the Ebola epidermic to the civil war her
country faced 11 years ago which killed a lot of Liberians, crumbled their
economy and vital institutions.
The president called on the international community to stop all theoretical explanations on the Ebola crisis and act fast to stop the spread of the deadly virus. This was what she wrote after the cut...
The president called on the international community to stop all theoretical explanations on the Ebola crisis and act fast to stop the spread of the deadly virus. This was what she wrote after the cut...
In just over six months, Ebola has
managed to bring my country to a standstill. We have lost over 2,000 Liberians.
Some are children struck down in the prime of their youth. Some were fathers,
mothers, brothers or best friends. Many were brave health workers that risked
their lives to save others, or simply offer victims comfort in their final
moments.
There is no coincidence Ebola has taken
hold in three fragile states – Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea - all battling
to overcome the effects of interconnected wars. In Liberia, our civil war ended
only eleven years ago. It destroyed our public infrastructure, crushed our
economy and led to an exodus of educated professionals. A country that had some
3,000 qualified doctors at the start of the war was dependent by its end on
barely three dozen. In the last few years, Liberia was bouncing back. We
realized there was a long way to go, but the future was looking bright.
Now Ebola threatens to erase that hard
work. Our economy was set to be larger and stronger this year, offering more
jobs to Liberians and raising living standards. Ebola is not just a health
crisis – across West Africa, a generation of young people risk being lost to an
economic catastrophe as harvests are missed, markets are shut and borders are
closed.
The virus has been able to spread so
rapidly because of the insufficient strength of the emergency, medical and
military services that remain under-resourced and without the preparedness to
confront such a challenge. This would have been the case whether the
confrontation was with Ebola, another infectious disease, or a natural
disaster.
But one thing is clear. This is a fight
in which the whole world has a stake. This disease respects no borders. The
damage it is causing in West Africa, whether in public health, the economy or
within communities – is already reverberating throughout the region and across
the world.
The international reaction to this
crisis was initially inconsistent and lacking in clear direction or urgency.
Now finally, the world has woken up. The community of nations has realized they
cannot simply pull up the drawbridge and wish this situation away.
This fight requires a commitment from
every nation that has the capacity to help – whether that is with emergency
funds, medical supplies or clinical expertise.
I have every faith in our resilience as
Liberians, and our capacity as global citizens, to face down this disease, beat
it and rebuild. History has shown that when a people are at their darkest hour,
humanity has an enviable ability to act with bravery, compassion and
selflessness for the benefit of those most in need.
From governments to international
organisations, financial institutions to NGOs, politicians to ordinary people
on the street in any corner of the world, we all have a stake in the battle
against Ebola. It is the duty of all of us, as global citizens, to send a
message that we will not leave millions of West Africans to fend for themselves
against an enemy that they do not know, and against whom they have little
defence.
The time for talking or theorizing is
over. Only concerted action will save my country, and our neighbours, from
experiencing another national tragedy. The words of Henrik Ibsen have never
been truer: “A thousand words leave not the same deep impression as does a
single deed.
Yours sincerely,
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf
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