John Baimba Sesay
Sierra Leone Telegraph: 26 November 2014
In the process of change, especially of attitudes and behavioral patterns, the will on the part of the people to accept the need for change, plays a crucial role in its success or failure.
Accepting could be one thing, but putting into practice what is required is something else.
In the fight against the Ebola Virus Disease, what is generally required is a change in attitude and behavior, and a readiness on the part of people to put an end those to traditional values and beliefs that have been highlighted as aiding the spread of the Virus.
In the typical African setting, people would rather play with the dead and wash it before burial, in the name of giving lasting respect. This is a serious challenge in the fight against the virus.
What also is challenging is the preparedness to avoid our traditional customs of shaking hands, whilst exchanging pleasantries with friends and families.
That said, I have continued to follow the activities of the presidency in relation to the fight against the EVD. In the last couple of weeks, the president has not taken a rest – literally.
Updates from the hardworking Communications Unit at State House, keep telling us how the President has been visiting district headquarter towns, having meetings with stakeholders, including Paramount Chiefs, all in a bid to putting an end to the virus.
The President has demonstrated the will to move things ahead and he must be supported.
What should also be paramount among us all as Sierra Leoneans is to ensure the drive to prosperity, which emanated from the change trajectory few years ago, is not diverted by the outbreak of the Ebola Virus.
The gains achieved in the last couple of years, especially following the successful implementation of the ‘Agenda for Change’ should not be allowed to be destroyed by the challenges brought by the Ebola Virus Disease.
In the last seven years, Sierra Leone has witness realistic commitment to her development agenda, given what the president and his team did in line with the change roadmap for country growth.
Much was achieved in terms of building her infrastructure, as well as in fixing her economy. This is after the government took over a nation literally broken apart, with less done to make state institutions work in tandem with people’s expectations.
Take the National Revenue Authority, which was less productivity during its formative stage.
But as we speak today, the revenue collection agency is not only performing per excellence, but tremendously helping with the country’s drive to a prosperous nation, with trillions now being collected for government use.
Much could today be said about what president Koroma and his Government achieved across the country in the area of infrastructure.
But with these and a number of other success stories, came the EVD. It has in some ways affected our development process.
It has also affected our economy, but factually there is on the part of the president and government the will to see an end to the virus.
What we are sure of is that in the next couple of months Sierra Leone will rise again, with all her development programmes.
The trajectory that the president has taken for the growth of our beloved nation will not be destroyed.
We shall rise again and we shall continue with what we have been doing in the last dozens of months. This trajectory won’t change. It shall continue as planned by the Government and people of Sierra Leone.
Hope there is, and the desire is well placed by all and sundry to bring into reality, what was designed in the roadmap to a prosperous nation.
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