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August 23, 2014

New Sierra Leone law makes it illegal to hide Ebola patients

Nurses and doctors wearing protective suits and masks perform a drill at Tires Aerodrome designed to transport people infected with the Ebola virus in Cascais, outskirts of Lisbon, on August 14, 2014. Nurses and doctors wearing protective suits and masks perform a drill at Tires Aerodrome designed to transport people infected with the Ebola virus in Cascais, outskirts of Lisbon, on August 14, 2014. Photo: PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA/AFP/Getty Images

Clarence Roy-MacAulay

FREETOWN, Sierra Leone — Sierra Leone voted to pass a new amendment to its health act, imposing possible jail time for anyone caught hiding an Ebola patient, a practice the World Health Organization believes has contributed to a major underestimation of the current outbreak.

The new law, an update to the country’s 1960 Public Health Act, was passed on Friday and imposes prison terms of up to two years for violators, said lawmaker Ansumana Jaiah Kaikai.

The measure was necessary to compel residents to co-operate with government officials, Kaikai said, noting that some residents had resisted steps to combat Ebola including the construction of isolation centres in their communities.

“This amendment seeks to address these emerging bottlenecks,” he added. The amendment now goes for presidential assent.

A man holds a placard reading "Ebola, go away" as members of the artist group "'Be Kok Spirit'' march to raise awareness on the Ebola virus, on August 19, 2014 in Abidjian.

A man holds a placard reading “Ebola, go away” as members of the artist group “‘Be Kok Spirit” march to raise awareness on the Ebola virus, on August 19, 2014 in Abidjian.

The country’s health ministry warned back in June that it was a serious crime to shelter someone infected with Ebola.

Sierra Leone has been hit hard by the current outbreak, recording at least 910 cases and 392 deaths, according to figures released Friday by the World Health Organization.

A total of 2,615 infections and 1,427 deaths have been recorded across West Africa.

These numbers don’t capture all cases in part because families hide patients, fearing high fatality rates and the stigma that comes with a positive diagnosis, the U.N. health agency said in a situation assessment released Friday.

New treatment centres in Liberia are being overwhelmed by patients that were not previously identified, suggesting an “invisible caseload” of patients that is going undetected, the WHO said.

Countries in the region and elsewhere in Africa have continued to impose travel restrictions, even though this hasn’t been recommended by the WHO.

Sierra Leonese government burial team members are disinfected after loading the bodies of Ebola victims onto a truck at the Medicins Sans Frontieres (MSF) facility in Kailahun, on August 14, 2014.

Sierra Leonese government burial team members are disinfected after loading the bodies of Ebola victims onto a truck at the Medicins Sans Frontieres (MSF) facility in Kailahun, on August 14, 2014.

Ivory Coast announced late Friday it was closing land borders with neighbouring Guinea and Liberia. Gabon, Senegal, South Africa and Cameroon had all earlier in the week imposed restrictions on some or all of the four countries with confirmed Ebola cases.

On Saturday, the Philippine government said it was recalling 115 peacekeepers from Liberia because of the health risk posed by Ebola.

Speaking in parliament on Friday, Sierra Leone majority leader Ibrahim Bundu accused development partners of being slow to respond to the Ebola crisis and said Sierra Leone had suffered “abandonment and isolation from those we viewed to be our biggest friends” in the region and beyond.

“These ugly developments are evidenced in the cancellations of flights, closing of borders, reduction of operational hours of banks and further isolation by shutting down businesses at the time of greatest need,” he said.

He said lawmakers would soon review the country’s partnerships “so as to form a permanent record of who are true friends are.”

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