We are grateful for God’s intervention in ridding Nigeria of the Ebola
virus but we should intercede for Liberia,
day and night until the situation improves.
More heartbreaking photos showing the sorry state of Ebola victims in Liberia have surfaced online.
In one of these photos taken by photographer John Moore for Getty Images, you can see this corpse of a young lady, Nama Fambule.
The next photos you’ll be looking at below are those of her mother
crying with the children of the dead woman, her grandchildren crying
beside her. Her sister is wailing inconsolably knowing full well that
her dead sister will be burnt to ashes as is the procedure for Ebola
victims. Even her husband weeps inconsolably.
The family insists the lady did not die of Ebola but from a year-long
protracted illness. Liberian health authorities are not taking chances
because most grieving relatives have been known to lie about cause of
death so that the corpse of their loved ones will escape being burnt.
from the Ebola Virus outbreak has risen to 4,033. Do not forget that a
terrible civil war claimed the lives of Liberians for about two decades.
Just when the country was picking up its pieces, Ebola knock at their
door to claim even more lives. Let’s make this our business.
#PrayForLiberia.
woman was a market vendor, who collapsed and died outside her home in
Monrovia, Liberia, while leaving to walk to a treatment center,
according to her relatives. Above, her sister is seen grieving on the
ground following the burial team’s departure.
late woman’s mother, Sophia Doe (right), and her young grand daughters
weep as her daughter’s remains are removed for cremation on Saturday.
this image, her husband, Varney Jonson, 46, is seen crying out in pain
as crews – donning white overalls, gloves and goggles – transport the
body of his wife, Nama Fambule, to a crematorium following a year-long
illness that he insists was not Ebola-related.
the proper burial of loved ones is so important in Liberian culture,
the removal of infected bodies for incineration is all the more
traumatic for surviving family members. Many relatives attempt to
convince burial teams to leave the bodies behind.
Ebola
is striking all ages.Another photo shows crews removing the body of a
four-year-old girl, wrapped in a blanket, from an apartment.
Photo Credit: John Moore and Mohammed Elshamy photographed
these gruesome scenarios for Getty Images.
Photo Source: DailyMail UK