This is leone – the currency of Sierra Leone. It is subdivided into 100 cents. Sierra Leone, is a country in West Africa with Freetown as its capital.
The good thing is spreading across the border ….. use of rapid response teams and strong community involvement in finding Ebola virus disease cases and contacts has yielded results in Sierra Leone. An epidemiological week has since passed with no new Ebola cases for the first time since the beginning of the outbreak. According to authorities, the Ebola response has moved to "phase 3"’, focusing on tracking each and every chain of Ebola virus transmission and closing down the remaining chains as quickly as possible. Sierra Leone is now down to a single chain of transmission, which started in Freetown but sparked a cluster of cases in Tonkolili, in the northern region of the country.Effectively tracking chains of transmission means finding every person who has been in contact with someone proven to be infected with Ebola, monitoring them closely for symptoms for 21 days and rapidly moving them to a treatment center if they develop symptoms of potential Ebola. Tonkolili had not seen a case of Ebola virus disease for more than 150 days, but the lessons learned during the outbreak in December 2014 had not been forgotten. For the first time since the Ebola outbreak was declared in Sierra Leone, the country has recorded zero new infections.There were no new Ebola cases reported last week according to the WHO.At the height of the outbreak Sierra Leone was reporting more than 500 new cases a week. Last week, for the first time since May last year, there were zero new cases. But authorities are warning against complacency. The Director of the National Ebola Response Centre (NERC), said: "This does not mean Sierra Leone is suddenly Ebola free. According to him, as long as the country has one Ebola case, people should still be cautious, continue to take the public health measures... around hand-washing, temperature checks, enhanced screening. In the country, over 1,000 people have died from Ebola since the epidemic erupted in 2014 - a six-fold increase of victims since its discovery in 1976. On the economic front, Sierra Leone said, gold exports had plunged three-fold and diamond exports nearly halved in the first half of 2015, a sign of the devastation wrought on the mining industry by the Ebola epidemic."The whopping 297 percent drop in gold export is not unexpected given that the deadly Ebola virus was raging through the countryside by then driving the workforce from the mining fields and mine owners from the country," the NMA statement said. Meanwhile, diamond exports dropped from a high of 64.5 thousand carats in April to 35.6 thousand carats in July.Already fragile after years of civil war, dictatorship or coups, the Ebola epidemic has devastated the mining, agriculture and tourism industries in Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia.Although poverty is widespread, Sierra Leone has mineral riches including diamonds, gold, bauxite, titanium ore and magnetite iron-ore, which have attracted massive investment. Stamping out an epidemic of a deadly infectious disease is a great achievement for any country. Liberia’s triumph is more remarkable still given the country’s poor access to healthcare. If that is replicated in neighbouring countries too, it is certainly good for the humanity. With regards – S. Sampathkumar
24th Aug 2015.