The family Nigeria’s fourth Ebola victim, late Ms. Justina Ejelonu
has cried out over the barrage of discrimination they face as a result
of her death from the dreaded disease. They disclosed this in a phone
conversation with Saharareporters.
Oyinye Lovelyn Anugwolu, the elder sister of late Justina, who works
for Women NGO in Enugu, says her husband, sisters, parents are facing
an unbearable stigma and public humiliation.
She told Saharareporters that people now treat family members as if
they are all carriers of Ebola. Her husband she says has been sent on
compulsory leave from work out of fear that he is might have contracted
the deadly Ebola disease.
“I haven’t seen her since October last year,” Mrs. Anugwolu says, “We are not in contact.”
Mrs. Anugwolu revealed that her sister did not spend her last days in
Enugu but in Lagos where she died and was buried without the family.
She also complained that her sister’s last days were gruesome.
According to Mrs. Anugwolu, the government neglected her and other
victims of Ebola. She told Saharareporters that her sister was denied
water the day before she died because healthcare workers were not
willing to go in and serve her and others suffering in the quarantine
center at Yaba area of Lagos.
“Wherever my sister is, her soul will be at peace for bringing her
plight to illuminate and force the government to act against Ebola, ”
she says.
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