Sierra Leone awaits countdown to Ebola-free declaration

1People celebrate being released from Ebola quarantine, after Sierra Leone President Ernest Bai Koroma cut a tape to release the quarantine in the village of Massessehbeh on the outskirts of Freetown, Sierra Leone on Aug. 14, 2015.
2MASSESSEHBEH, Sierra Leone - It had been five months since an Ebola death when Musa Kamara travelled to his hometown for festivities to mark the end of Ramadan.
3Not long after his sudden death in this roadside village, authorities came with a grim message: The killer virus was back.
4Soon officials barricaded this community of nearly 600 people, putting up orange plastic fencing to quarantine half the town for the 21-day Ebola incubation period after potential exposure.
5But late last week, residents who could only talk to family on the other side of the fence by phone erupted into song and dance when President Ernest Bai Koroma came to cut it down, marking the formal end of Sierra Leone's largest remaining quarantine.
6Alie Senkoh, 21, said he couldn't wait to "move all around town" after days of playing cards and dice at home with his aunt and grandmother.
7"We are feeling good because we are healthy and there is no more Ebola here," he said.
8"We believe this was the only way to stop the transmission."
9Even amid the jubilation, there was reason for caution.
10Authorities continue to monitor dozens of others who came into contact with 23-year-old Kamara, his mother and uncle, who later became infected.
11Both are recovering, health authorities said.
12The World Health Organization announced Monday that 43 people will remain in quarantine until the end of this week, while 38 others in the capital, Freetown, where Kamara lived, must stay in quarantine until Aug. 29.
13Officials desperately hope they can soon announce the start of the countdown to an Ebola-free declaration from WHO nearly 15 months after the first patient tested positive in Sierra Leone.
14After the last patient is released, the country must go 42 days - two incubation periods - before such a declaration can be made.
15The benchmark already was reached in Liberia, only for that country to face a brief setback when new cases emerged.
16Billboards plastered throughout Sierra Leone's capital still warn people to dial the 117 hotline to report all deaths, and others encourage families to "pray from at least one meter (yard) away" to avoid contact with highly infectious corpses.
17Yet there are signs the country is starting to let down its guard.
18The main road from the capital east to the second city of Bo and onwards to the town of Kenema still has more than half a dozen stopping points where passengers must undergo temperature checks.
19But hand soap is no longer put out with many of the hand-washing buckets that were once so essential.
20Koroma has warned Sierra Leoneans about such complacency amid the recent successes in the fight against Ebola.
21During his visit to this quarantined village, he reminded people how they had made it 150 days without a case "only to return to square one" when the latest victim was buried by his family before his diagnosis of Ebola was known.
22"You should report people who are sick and all dead bodies," the president urged the crowds celebrating their release.
23When Kamara returned to his home village, the family did not suspect Ebola.
24More than two dozen of his closest relatives were considered at high risk, though only his mother and an uncle developed Ebola.
25It was a much better outcome than initially feared when it was learned he had sought treatment at two health facilities before dying - and then had a traditional burial because the family did not think he had Ebola.
26Contact with bodies has been a major source of disease transmission since the first case emerged in neighbouring Guinea in late 2013.
27While authorities have released most residents from quarantine, about a dozen of Kamara's relatives must remain inside their homes for another week until the incubation period has passed.
28His 21-year-old sister, Mamusu Kargbo, wiped tears from her eyes as she watched jubilant neighbours bang on makeshift drums made from empty water jugs, dancing and chanting, "Now we have our freedom!"
29Her brother, who sold eggs and other goods on the streets of Freetown, had been fasting for the holy month of Ramadan and said nothing about feeling unwell.
30Now he leaves behind a wife, a young son and other family back in his home village who counted on his remittances to eke by.
31"For us it is not yet over," she said of Ebola.