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The government declared a public holiday to allow school children and workers to take part in a festival in the capital Monrovia featuring traditional dance and contemporary music. The festivities in Monrovia come after the World Health Organization made the announcement over the weekend, finally giving the country hardest hit by the outbreak something to celebrate.

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Liberia is FREE of Ebola: Thousands gather in the streets to celebrate after country is given all clear from disease that killed 4,700

May 12, 2015

*Festivities in Monrovia come after World Health Organization statement
*Public holiday declared to allow pupils and workers take part in celebration
*Revellers waved placards with slogans including 'bye bye Ebola', 'we are the winner' and 'we will always overcome'
*West African country was hardest hit by outbreak, which still isn't over in neighbouring Guinea and Sierra Leone

Awoman joins thousands to celebrate

Thousands lined the streets of the Liberian capital today to celebrate the country being declared free from deadly Ebola, which killed 4,700 people in the west African country.

The festivities in Monrovia come after the World Health Organization made the announcement over the weekend, finally giving the country hardest hit by the outbreak something to celebrate.

The government declared a public holiday to allow school children and workers to take part in a festival in the capital Monrovia featuring traditional dance and contemporary music.

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Painted man waves goodbye to Ebola
Painted man waves goodbye to Ebola
Men celebrating that Liberia is Ebola free

Students sang joyfully and waved placards with slogans including 'bye bye Ebola', 'we are the winner' and 'we will always overcome'.

Woman wearing wearing hat while celebrating

The ceremony began on a sombre note with testimonials from health workers and other staff in the country's Ebola treatment units (ETUs), as well as survivors and body disposal team members.

'When I contracted the Ebola virus I was carried to the ETU, where all those who were in the centre with me died. Only I survived,' said Tee Love Lorseh.

'While I was there my father and my mother died from the disease.'

The WHO said in a statement on Saturday that 42 days had passed since the last person confirmed with the virus in Liberia was buried.

That period is double the number of days the virus requires to incubate, and WHO hailed its eradication as an enormous development in the crisis.

But the agency warned that because Ebola outbreaks were continuing in neighbouring Guinea and Sierra Leone, the risk remained high that infected people could re-enter the country.
Dignitaries at Monday's ceremony included Togolese President Faure Gnassingbe, who congratulated the Liberian people for their 'wonderful job'.

'Ebola is an ally of silence and slow reaction. This should be a lesson for us in Africa. Quick reaction is needed in fighting a virus,' he said.

Liberian lawmaker Saah Joseph, recognised as a key figure in the country's Ebola response and nicknamed 'The Hero' in local media, recalled the dark days of the epidemic.

Reveller wave the Liberia Flag
A man on stilts - Country Devil
Ellen Johnson speaks to a nurse

'One day we carried more than 300 bodies to Redemption Hospital. We had to remove some to the Island Clinic. When we got there, we had more bodies. It was difficult for me, frustrating, but we had to do the job,' he said.

The WHO's 'Ebola-free' declaration was officially handed by the agency's country representative Alex Gasasira to Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, who thanked citizens for helping eradicate the virus.

'My special thanks go to the security apparatus. They were heroes,' she said.

She also recommitted herself to helping the governments and people of Sierra Leone and Guinea to overcome the disease. 'We are going to intensify that effort because we know that until they are free, totally free, we are not free,' President Sirleaf said.

Guests from the African Union, Ghana and Nigeria also attended the Liberian event.

Liberia's Chief Justice Francis Korkpor called the Ebola crisis 'an unprovoked attack on our nation that posed a serious threat to the survival of our existence.'

Source: By Associated Press

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