Sierra Leone: Ebola Health Workers Go on Strike, Leave Infected Corpses Lying in the Street

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
October 8, 2014

These niggas are doing a hard job that someone has to do, but their superiors have embezzle their salaries and send them on strike.  And they have seen fit to go on strike, and leave everyone in their country to die.
These niggas are doing a hard job that someone has to do, but their superiors have embezzle their salaries and send them on strike. And they have seen fit to go on strike, and leave everyone in their country to die.

Only in Africa.

Burial teams in Sierra Leone are currently on strike, according to reports, claiming they are not receiving sufficient hazard pay. They are leaving the Ebola-Chan’s victims to line the streets across the country.

Fox News:

The Sierra Leone Broadcasting Corporation first reported the strike Wednesday. Sidie Yahya Tunis, a spokesman for the country’s health ministry, described the situation to The Associated Press as “very embarrassing” and insisted that money was available to pay the crews. He promised to provide more information later Wednesday.

Speaking on a radio breakfast program Wednesday, deputy health minister Madina Rahman said the strike had been “resolved,” though organizers could not immediately be reached to confirm it was over.

Rahman said the dispute centered on a one-week backlog for hazard pay that had been deposited in the bank but was not given to burial teams on time.

“The health ministry is going to investigate the delay in the health workers not receiving their money,” Rahman said.

Tunis said the burial teams make up a total of 600 workers organized in groups of 12.

The government was already facing criticism this week over a shipping container filled with medical gear and mattresses that has been held up at the port for more than a month. Sierra Leone is one of three West African countries, along with Liberia and Sierra Leone, hit hardest by the outbreak. The official number of confirmed Ebola cases is 2,100, with more than 600 dead, though global health officials say that the real number of both cases and deaths is likely far higher. In all, more than 3,400 people have died since the outbreak was first reported in March.

In the current outbreak, burial teams in West Africa are being asked to retrieve the bodies of people who die from Ebola in their homes and in the streets as opposed to in hospitals. They do their job clad in multiple layers of clothing, along with goggles, boots, gloves, and head coverings in order to prevent infection.

It is so ridiculous, it is hard not to laugh.

What is no laughing matter, however, is that the West is now claiming that these people, who are completely unwilling to help themselves, deserve the unlimited help of the White world – because of slavery or whatever – and that we must put billions of lives at risk in order to help them.