Monrovia
(AFP) - Nurses at Liberia's largest hospital went on strike on Monday,
demanding better pay and equipment to protect them against a deadly
Ebola epidemic which has killed hundreds in the west African nation.
John
Tugbeh, spokesman for the strikers at Monrovia's John F Kennedy
hospital, said the nurses would not return to work until they are
supplied with "personal protective equipment (PPEs)", the hazmat-style
suits which guard against infectious diseases.
"From
the beginning of the Ebola outbreak we have not had any protective
equipment to work with. As result, so many doctors got infected by the
virus. We have to stay home until we get the PPEs," he said.
The
Ebola virus, transmitted through contact with infected bodily fluids,
has killed more than 1,500 people in four countries since the start of
the year -- almost 700 of them in Liberia.
A
high proportion of the deaths -- almost a tenth -- have been among
health workers and the World Health Organization has warned that the
outbreak is set to get a lot worse, predicting up to 20,000 cases before
it is brought under control.
The
hospital closed temporarily in July over the infections and deaths of
an unspecified number of health workers who had been treating Ebola
patients.
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