FREETOWN (Reuters) – Burial workers in Sierra Leone have dumped bodies in the street outside a hospital in protest at authorities’ failure to pay bonuses for handling Ebola victims.
Residents said up to 15 corpses had been abandoned in the eastern town of Kenema, three of them at a hospital entrance to stop people entering. The head of the district Ebola Response Team, Abdul Wahab Wan, said the bodies included those of two babies.
A spokesman for the striking workers, who asked not to be identified, said they had not been paid their weekly hazard allowance for seven weeks.
Authorities accepted the money had not been paid but said that all the striking members of the Ebola Burial Team would be dismissed.
“Displaying corpses in a very, very inhumane manner is completely unacceptable,” said the spokesman for the National Ebola Response Centre, Sidi Yahya Tunis.
He added that the central government had paid the money to the district health management team. “Somebody somewhere needs to be investigated (to find out) where these monies have been going,” he told Reuters.
Healthcare workers have repeatedly gone on strike in Liberia and Sierra Leone over pay and dangerous working conditions. Two weeks ago, workers walked off the job at a clinic in Bo, Sierra Leone.
Sierra Leone has become the biggest hotspot in the West African Ebola epidemic, which has killed nearly 5,500 people since March.
The outbreak appears to be coming under control in neighbouring Liberia and Guinea but infection rates have accelerated in Sierra Leone. The head of a special U.N. mission on Ebola acknowledged on Monday it would not meet the target of containing the outbreak by early December.
China said on Tuesday it would step up its Ebola response.
“More then 600 medical staff and public health experts have been sent to the affected countries in western Africa and the number is estimated to grow to 1,000 in the coming months,” said Cui Li, Chinese vice minister for national health, at the opening of an Ebola Treatment Unit in Monrovia.
Despite pledges of hundreds of millions of dollars in aid, and the deployment of U.S. and British troops, the weakness of healthcare systems and infrastructure in the affected countries has complicated the fight against the worst known outbreak of the Ebola virus.
(Additional reporting by James Harding Giahyue and Derick Snyder in Monrovia; Writing by Daniel Flynn and Emma Farge; Editing by Andrew Roche)