The
Builsa South District Assembly has placed a temporary ban on the sale of bush
meat as part of measures to help prevent the outbreak and spread of the deadly
Ebola virus. The Assembly had also intensified its public education and
enforcement of its bye-laws on open defecation, food hygiene and the production
and sale of sachet water. Mrs Elizabeth Jane Afiuc, District Chief Executive
(DCE), said this after members of the
district had embarked on several hours of cleaning the area. The event, led by
the DCE, attracted a large crowd including staff of the assembly and Zoomlion
Company Limited to rid the district of filth to avoid the outbreak of
preventable diseases such as cholera and Ebola. Mrs Afiuc said the assembly’s
decision to temporarily ban the sale of bush meat was because it had been noted
that animals such as bats, monkeys, and baboons were the carries of the Ebola
virus. She indicated that the cleanup campaign, which was organised to climax
the public health education on Ebola, had also become necessary because of
recent increase in the number of Ebola cases in some parts of West Africa and
the cholera outbreak in Ghana. Mrs Afiuc said as part of efforts to keep the district
clean and revive the communal spirit of the people, the assembly would, every
first Saturday of the month, embark on cleanup campaigns to keep the
environment clean. The DCE commended the people for the high turnout and urged
them to adhere to the directives of the assembly to prevent the outbreak and
spread of preventable diseases. She entreated the District Epidemic Committee
to continue to sensitise the people on preventable measures.
Mr Aluisi Peter, District Diseases Control Officer, said there had not been any
reported case of cholera in the area but that the district recorded 540
diarrhoea cases in the first half of 2014.
Source Citi
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