Education is key to Sierra Leone after Ebola says award-winning reporter Umaru Fofana
Education in emergencies
Celebrations kick off in #SierraLeone marking end of #Ebola in a few hours. pic.twitter.com/uvcoVARzlX
国产视频 Umaru Fofana (@UmaruFofana) November 6, 2015
November 7, 2015 is a date that will be etched on the minds of the people of Sierra Leone 国产视频 the day when the World Health Organization declared the country free of Ebola.
The outbreak caused more than 11,000 deaths across West Africa and the shutdown of Sierra Leone国产视频檚 schools for nine months, leaving 1.8 million students missing out on education.
Reporting from the front line for American radio station NPR, the BBC and other news outlets, freelance journalist and dad-of-four Umaru Fofana knows all too well the devastation the health crisis has caused in his beloved country.
His selfless efforts to tell the heartbreaking story and issues surrounding Ebola to the world were recognised when he recently received a prestigious radio accolade by winning a Peabody Award.
Through the crisis, Umaru lost friends and witnessed how terrified residents threw food to two children orphaned by Ebola because they were too scared to go near them 国产视频 all because of the virus which he says 国产视频渢hrives on love and empathy国产视频 due to its contagious nature.
One year on from the outbreak that killed people 3955 in Sierra Leone and ripped apart families and communities, the country is slowly getting back on its feet. The WHO announcement followed confirmation that 42 days had passed without any new Ebola cases.
Umaru Fofana in Sierra Leone: 国产视频淭here are monumental challenges国产视频
However, Umaru believes more needs to be done to help Sierra Leone and says healing the scars of the outbreak in an already struggling country is not a simple task.
He said: 国产视频淚 am very hopeful that this is the end of the current outbreak in Sierra Leone. However, the challenges that lie ahead are so monumental that there could be pockets of the outbreak remerging in the near future.
国产视频淲ith the eyes of big powers and foreign NGOs having shifted to other trouble spots around the world, Sierra Leone is not yet out of the woods. Its healthcare system, which even in the best of times was largely dysfunctional, needs a complete overhaul.
国产视频淭hat cannot be done if corruption remains as endemic as it is at the moment.
国产视频淭he agony of those who recovered from the disease 国产视频 the so-called Survivors 国产视频 continues with health and emotional complications emerging largely unattended. Children orphaned by Ebola and women who were widowed by the virus are shunned by society and neglected by the authorities.国产视频
The survivors of the virus have been bearing the brunt of the cruel disease which has left many children without parents. Two vivid memories stick in Umaru国产视频檚 mind.
Sierra Leone student gets her temperature checked when secondary school in Kenema reopened Picture: UNICEF/Bindra
He said: 国产视频淚 saw a child 国产视频 possibly five years old 国产视频 in a treatment centre in the eastern town of Kenema inside an Ebola treatment ward.
国产视频淎s he walked away from my cameraman and me towards his bed it seemed he was going to the gallows. I returned home, hugged my two-year-old daughter and flashes of the boy returned.
国产视频淚 also saw two children inside a derelict building in Devil Hole, just outside Freetown. They had lost their parents to the virus and had gone days without an ambulance to pick them up despite persistent calls to the toll-free number.
国产视频淭he neighbours were scared to come anywhere close to them. In one instance a good neighbour flung food at them. Horrendous.
国产视频淛ust two of the many difficult times I witnessed for children 国产视频 but also I witnessed entire families being decimated by a virus that thrives on love and empathy.国产视频
During the crisis, 1.8 million children were shut out of their schools until classes began to reopen in April. The disease claimed the lives of 945 school students and 181 teachers.
In December last year, a report by the聽Global Business Coalition for Education and A World at School recommended a three-fold response to the outbreak in a bid to sustain the education of five million students affected by Ebola in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea.
A health worker advises resident in Kailahun district during Ebola outbreak Picture: UNICEF/Douglas
Since the reopening of schools, students have been praised for following safety protocols from the United Nations children国产视频檚 agency UNICEF in a bid to keep schools free from the deadly virus.
Concerned for their own children国产视频檚 safety, Umaru and his wife kept them at home and self-taught them as best as they could. He said: 国产视频淚 have four children for whom education was very challenging during the Ebola outbreak.
国产视频淟ike other kids across the country their education ground to a halt. Schools were closed.
国产视频淔irst it was children in Kailahun District where the virus聽had started in the country who were told to stay at home. This is an area which even in the best of times is badly neglected with education at a very low ebb.
国产视频淭hen children in the rest of the country followed as the virus snaked its tail throughout Sierra Leone. My children also stayed at home as my wife and I took turns to teach them.
国产视频淲e thought of bringing in a teacher to teach them at home but that in itself was exposing them to risks. It was very hard to keep them with books outside school and not on a planned holiday.国产视频
A health worker at an Ebola treatment centre outside Kenema in 2014 Picture: Anna Jeffreys/IRIN
The first to go to school in his family, Umaru knows too well the value of education.
He said: 国产视频淚 struggled to get an education. Neither of my parents went to school. Despite that, or maybe because of it, my mum always wanted me to become聽educated.
国产视频淚 remember how she would go out of her way 国产视频 sell her favourite聽 clothes 国产视频 to pay my fees and prepare food for me when I went to secondary聽 school and had to leave my birthplace 国产视频 Bumpeh 国产视频 which only had primary schools.
国产视频淎 friend paid for my school-leaving exams when my parents couldn国产视频檛 afford it. And I mined for diamonds and hawked to be able to raise聽my university fees. That was the typical life of most of my peers 国产视频 and many聽had to drop out of school. It remains largely so for most even up to today.
国产视频淭o say education is the key to everything in a country like Sierra Leone is an understatement. Learning 国产视频 from primary to tertiary (post-secondary education) 国产视频 has taken a nosedive and this predated the Ebola outbreak.国产视频
More than 230,000 children of primary school age were already not enrolled before the disease took hold, according to UNICEF国产视频檚 Sierra Leone Country Status Report 2013.
Sierra Leone girls return to St Joseph国产视频檚 Secondary in Freetown in April Picture: UNICEF/Irwin
The journalist added: 国产视频淲ith Ebola we need to build the health sector and the doctors and nurses and other healthcare workers need to be trained 国产视频 that国产视频檚 education. This country needs engineers and scientists who are to be trained in schools and colleges with hardly any schools having a proper science laboratory. I would say EDUCATION, EDUCATION, EDUCATION before anything else.国产视频
Speaking about receiving the Peabody Award for his Ebola reports for NPR, Umaru said: 国产视频淚t gives me a bitter-sweet feeling. The misery I reported on 国产视频 the needless deaths of thousands of my compatriots and the attendant consequences on those who survived the virus are an everlasting presence on my mind.
国产视频淏ut I am also happy that the risks I exposed myself and my family to 国产视频 to be able to bring the story out to gain world attention for intervention 国产视频 paid off. The world came and my effort is being recognised. I feel truly humbled that the NPR team I was a part of was recognised this much.国产视频
After the announcement about the end of the Ebola outbreak, Dr Anders Nordstr枚m, World Health Organisation Representative in Sierra Leone, said today: 国产视频淲e now have a unique opportunity to support Sierra Leone to build a strong and resilient public health system ready to detect and respond to the next outbreak of disease, or any other public health threat.国产视频
Liberia was declared Ebola-free in September but in Guinea four new cases have been recorded in the past two weeks.
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