http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/outbreaks/2014-west-africa/case-counts.html http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health/ebola-orphans-shunned-in-liberia-guinea-and-sierra-leone/story-fneuz9ev-1227086242451 http://time.com/3537563/ebola-donations/
http://www.lr.undp.org/content/dam/liberia/docs/EBOLA%20INFORMATION/SITREPS/Ebola%20Sitreps%20on%20Liberia/Sitrep%20268%20Feb%207th%202015.pdf
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Project Proposal
For the
Provision of Ebola Virus
Effects Assistance to Liberia
Target Communities/Worse Hit:
Montserrado, Margibi, Bong, Lofa and
Nimba Counties of Liberia
1st July-31st December 2015
Presented to:
http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/outbreaks/2014-west-africa/case-counts.html http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health/ebola-orphans-shunned-in-liberia-guinea-and-sierra-leone/story-fneuz9ev-1227086242451 http://time.com/3537563/ebola-donations/
http://www.lr.undp.org/content/dam/liberia/docs/EBOLA%20INFORMATION/SITREPS/Ebola%20Sitreps%20on%20Liberia/Sitrep%20268%20Feb%207th%202015.pdf
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1. Executive Summary
1.1. Project Name
Ebola Virus Effect Assistance to Liberia
1.2 . Contact Person
Neabei W. Toah
Founding Director/President
World Kindness Liberia
GSA Road
Paynesville Liberia
Email: [email protected]
Phone: +231886578071
1.3. Project Targeted Locations
Liberia:
Montserrado County
Margibi County
Bong County
Lofa County
Nimba County
1.4. Donor contribution Requested
US$ 1,071,214.50
1.5. Project timeframe
1st June- 31st December 2015
1.6 Project Beneficiaries
Estimated:
Awareness: 1.5million people
Reunification: 5,000 people
Victims’ families: 100 families
1.7 Project Summary
http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/outbreaks/2014-west-africa/case-counts.html http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health/ebola-orphans-shunned-in-liberia-guinea-and-sierra-leone/story-fneuz9ev-1227086242451 http://time.com/3537563/ebola-donations/
http://www.lr.undp.org/content/dam/liberia/docs/EBOLA%20INFORMATION/SITREPS/Ebola%20Sitreps%20on%20Liberia/Sitrep%20268%20Feb%207th%202015.pdf
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This intervention will help to save lives and create hope for individuals, families, communities,
schools and the nation by the provision of five key assistances : 1) Ebola awareness to keep
informing people about the dangerous nature of the virus, changing the perception of people who
induce stigmatization being suffered by Ebola survivals through the local media, public
audience system, leaflets and T-shirts; 2) Reunification programs in various communities as the
Ebola epidemic has multiplied hatred in the hearts of otherwise good neighbors, families/friends,
loved ones as everyone has been managing to save his own life by means of disassociating
themselves from people in such crisis time; 3) Self-help project Supports to families of Ebola
victims such as people especially women and children who have lost their sole bread winners to
the epidemic, and the few survivals of the virus as this project will be providing used clothes,
sanitary materials and meager financial supports through self-help projects to help save the
future of families of Ebola victims from misery; 4) Ebola Survivors Rights advocacy to help
defend the rights of survivors as most of them are currently undergoing serious neglects and
ostracism in their families, communities and neighborhoods. There are instances where landlords
have evicted some of those who are tenants; and 5) Securing of land for orphanage home which
is very expedient as the prevailing situation has left to suffer too many innocent kids, depriving
them of their rights to that tender love from mummy and daddy. This phase of the project will
secure a parcel of land for a well planned future home to these precious kids.
Major focus by the government of Liberia and its partners has been rather concentrated on the
building of more Ebola Treatment Units ETUs across the country and maintaining them in order
to save lives while there has been no revealed plan at the moment for families affected gravely
by this virus, neither has there been any known actions to reunify individuals, families and
communities that tend to fall apart permanently given the devilish nature of the disease. A
proactive approach such as this project is extremely necessary to impact positively on the health,
social interaction and economic conditions of Liberians in support of the efforts by the
government.
The goal of this project is to create access to safety information, promote mutual co-existence
and renew lost hope.
2.0 Project Background
2.1 General Situation in the Country:
Liberia was established by freed slaves from America in 1822 and entered into a bloody civil war
in December 1989 that lasted until July 2003. Liberia is struggling to recover from the 14 years
of bloody civil war which took away more than 250,000 lives and ransacked the entire country,
leaving so much of wounds to be healed. The government of President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, the
first post-war democratically elected president has been struggling to put the broken pieces of
Liberia together which has yet remained an ever evolving challenge with the poor economic
condition of the country.
http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/outbreaks/2014-west-africa/case-counts.html http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health/ebola-orphans-shunned-in-liberia-guinea-and-sierra-leone/story-fneuz9ev-1227086242451 http://time.com/3537563/ebola-donations/
http://www.lr.undp.org/content/dam/liberia/docs/EBOLA%20INFORMATION/SITREPS/Ebola%20Sitreps%20on%20Liberia/Sitrep%20268%20Feb%207th%202015.pdf
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At another front of the already devastated condition for Liberians is the eruption of one of the
world’s deadliest diseases ever known in human history-the Ebola Virus. The Ebola virus
entered into Liberia from neighboring Guinea and Sierra Leone in March, 2014 and has taken
away the lives of more than 3000 people many of whom were bread winners for their families.
The virus continues to take away several lives and no one can predict when the situation will
subside.
The evil nature of this disease continues to diversify as a tree with several branches. Among
many negative impacts of the Ebola virus is the dozens of children becoming orphans, miserable
economic circumstances for many families and the rapid promotion of grudge and hatred among
family members, neighbors, and community dwellers. Persons or families victimized by the virus
are often ostracized by others and subjected to total neglect and loneliness. It is quite unfortunate
that the situation depicts that people would behave in such a way to prevent themselves from
getting infected. Clothes and other household materials of families of Ebola victims are often
burned by health workers to prevent the viral spread without being replenished. On the other
hand, survivors continue to face serious challenges as community members consider them as
evidence of the Ebola Virus in their midst.
2.2 The World Kindness Liberia’s Strategy:
Liberia is among the poorest countries of the world which is noted for poor health care services
even under normal condition. It has however come to the most challenging stage at this time with
the presence of the deadly Ebola virus epidemic which calls for the support of all compassionate
hearted individuals, churches and other organizations demonstrating human kindness in the fight
against the virus which will save not only Liberia but the neighboring countries and the world at
large. The World Kindness Liberia through an emergency short-term strategy seeks to indulge
programs of rapid results through awareness creation which involves professional trainings of
communities, reunification of families and community members with the involvement of
community leaderships, community youths, schools authorities, church leaders, traditional
elders, and etcetera. The strategy also involves self-help project management trainings to
families of Ebola victims and the provision of materials and meager financial aids to help them
continue with life in the absence of their bread winners. With one strategy linking to another, this
project as well seeks to promote the rights of Ebola virus survivals as communities have
subjected them to total ostracism, and to also use this phase of the project to procure land for a
well planned future home to hundreds of children now orphaned by the deadly Ebola Virus
Epidemic.
In summary the major problems are:
Deaths
Social disintegration
Economic challenges to the families or losers of bread winners
http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/outbreaks/2014-west-africa/case-counts.html http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health/ebola-orphans-shunned-in-liberia-guinea-and-sierra-leone/story-fneuz9ev-1227086242451 http://time.com/3537563/ebola-donations/
http://www.lr.undp.org/content/dam/liberia/docs/EBOLA%20INFORMATION/SITREPS/Ebola%20Sitreps%20on%20Liberia/Sitrep%20268%20Feb%207th%202015.pdf
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2.3 Case Summary by Target Project Location
Montserrado County: is a county in the northwestern portion of Liberia. One of 15 counties
that comprise the first-level of administrative division in the nation, it has
four districts. Bensonville serves as the capital with the area of the county measuring 1,909
square kilometers (737 sq mi), the smallest in the country. As of the 2008 Census, it has a
population of 1,144,806, making it the most populous county in Liberia because it is where the
nation’s capital Monrovia is located. This has made the fight against the Ebola virus in
Montserrado so challenging. In a new report published in the journal, the Lancet Infectious
Diseases, researchers from Yale School of Public Health used modeling to compare estimates of
case numbers in Liberia to currently available resources as well as those resources promised by
international bodies. Their data show that without significantly scaled up efforts, there will be
170,996 cases of Ebola and 90,122 deaths related to the virus in Montserrado County. This study
urges a rapid and immediate scaling-up of all currently available non-pharmaceutical
intervention strategies to minimize the occurrence of new cases and deaths. Covering the period
from May, 2014 to February, 2015, there have been 4989 cases and 2038 deaths.
Margibi County: is a county on the north to central coast of Liberia. One of 15 counties that comprise the first-level of administrative division in the nation, it has
four districts. Kakata serves as the capital with the area of the county measuring 2,616 square
kilometers (1,010 sq mi). As of the 2008 Census, it has a population of 199,689, making it the
sixth most populous county in Liberia.
On March 30, 2014, the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare (MOHSW) of Liberia alerted
health officials at Firestone Liberia, Inc. (Firestone) based in Margibi County of the first known
case of Ebola virus disease (Ebola) inside the Firestone rubber tree plantation of Liberia. The
patient, who was the wife of a Firestone employee, had cared for a family member with
confirmed Ebola in Lofa County, the epicenter of the Ebola outbreak in Liberia during March–
April 2014. To prevent a large outbreak among Firestone's 8,500 employees, their dependents,
and the surrounding population, the company responded by instituting some measures.
Unfortunately, reports from August 1–September 23, show that 71 Ebola cases (cumulative
incidence 0.09%) in 39 families within Firestone's health care catchment population, of which 57
(80%) were confirmed. Fifty-three Ebola cases were fatal, of which 39 were confirmed cases
(mortality rate among confirmed cases = 68%). The proportion of deaths that occurred by
location among the 39 confirmed Ebola case deaths were as follows: 27 (69%) at the ETU, six
(15%) at the main hospital and six (15%) in the community. The 14 remaining deaths were
among suspected Ebola cases, of which 11 (79%) occurred in the community and three (21%) in
the ETU. During the same period, there were 536 Ebola cases in Margibi County (cumulative
incidence = 0.23%). Among the 62 patients isolated in Firestone's ETU, 45 (73%) had confirmed
Ebola. Thirty-five patients admitted to the ETU died. Among those were 27 with confirmed
Ebola (ETU mortality rate = 60%) and three with suspected Ebola. Twenty-four (39%) patients
admitted to the ETU were members from the densely populated communities surrounding
Firestone's plantation area. From May, 2014 to February, 2015, there have been 1292 cases and
582 deaths reported in Margibi County.
http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/outbreaks/2014-west-africa/case-counts.html http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health/ebola-orphans-shunned-in-liberia-guinea-and-sierra-leone/story-fneuz9ev-1227086242451 http://time.com/3537563/ebola-donations/
http://www.lr.undp.org/content/dam/liberia/docs/EBOLA%20INFORMATION/SITREPS/Ebola%20Sitreps%20on%20Liberia/Sitrep%20268%20Feb%207th%202015.pdf
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Bong County: is a county in the north-central portion of Liberia. One of 15 counties that
comprise the first-level of administrative division in the nation, it has
twelve districts. Gbarnga serves as the capital with the area of the county measuring 8,772 square
kilometers (3,387 sq mi). As of the 2008 Census, it has a population of 328,919, making it the
third most populous county in Liberia.
Phebe in Bong County was known as one of the best hospitals in rural Liberia, supported by the
local government and international religious and academic partners. Phebe was especially known
for its high-quality nursing care, serving as a training hospital for nearby Cuttington University,
one of the country's few nursing schools.
Introduction of the Ebola virus to Bong County came a few hours after arriving in the emergency
room of a woman who had escaped from Lofa having been suspected of the virus. The woman
was admitted to the medicine ward with a list of potential infections-all the usual suspects in
Bong County: malaria, typhoid, sepsis.
An epidemic had been raging for months in nearby Guinea, but Ebola was not considered as a
possible diagnosis. After all, nobody at Phebe had ever seen a patient before with Ebola, and as
the axiom goes in medicine, when you hear hoof beats, think horses, not zebras; certainly don't
start imagining unicorns. Over the ensuing months, the epidemic rippled across Bong. Hundreds
of individuals were infected, and perhaps more importantly, basic social institutions also began
to collapse. Covering the period from May, 2014 to February 2015, there have been reports
amounting to 598 cases and 156 deaths in Bong County.
Lofa County: is a county in the northernmost portion of Liberia. One of 15 counties that
comprise the first-level of administrative division in the nation, it has
six districts. Voinjama serves as the capital with the area of the county measuring 9,982 square
kilometers (3,854 sq mi). As of the 2008 Census, it has a population of 270,114, making it the
fourth most populous county in Liberia.
The Ebola epidemic in West Africa has hurt Liberia more than any other country. In Liberia,
one of the worst hit next to Monrovia has been a town in Lofa County called Barkedu. Barkedu
alone accounts for more than 45% of the country’s Ebola deaths. The virus has successfully
swept away entire families-children, women and men. The virus was brought to Barkedu by a
sick traditional chief who went to Barkedu from Monrovia for traditional herbal treatment who
later died and was given community burial by bathing, funeral ceremony and escorting into the
cemetery. Through direct contact with the dead chief the virus rapidly spread throughout Lofa
County as the burial of a traditional chief is always remarkably attended by accumulation of
people including other traditional chiefs, elders and loyalists. However, there were also some
instances of people crossing the borders from neighboring Guinea and Sierra Leone into Lofa
County with the virus.
http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/outbreaks/2014-west-africa/case-counts.html http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health/ebola-orphans-shunned-in-liberia-guinea-and-sierra-leone/story-fneuz9ev-1227086242451 http://time.com/3537563/ebola-donations/
http://www.lr.undp.org/content/dam/liberia/docs/EBOLA%20INFORMATION/SITREPS/Ebola%20Sitreps%20on%20Liberia/Sitrep%20268%20Feb%207th%202015.pdf
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The Ebola virus entered Barkedu in July which is the peak of the farming season in Liberia and
disrupted the farming activities miserably. Markets have since been closed by authorities to
prevent the spread of the virus. The harvest time is here but farms were not planted thus creating
serious hunger situation in the area. Between May 2014 and February 2015, reports have it at
678 cases and 404 deaths from Lofa County.
Nimba County: is a county in the north-central portion of Liberia. One of 15 counties that
comprise the first-level of administrative division in the nation, it has
six districts. Sanniquellie serves as the capital with the area of the county measuring 11,551
square kilometers (4,460 sq mi), the largest in the nation. As of the 2008 Census, it has a
population of 462,026, making it the second most populous county in Liberia. The Ebola virus
multiplied rapidly in Nimba County when a man claimed to have had a vision where God
revealed the cure to the Ebola virus to him in a dream. Sick people began to move in to Nimba
from all over the country by influx several of who were Ebola infested persons. Authorities tried
to put stop to the action of the so-called divine healer but mobile phones were used to connect
him with his clients in private. Unfortunately, he also died having brought himself into sufficient
contacts with infected persons. The report had it at 337 cases and 137 deaths for Nimba County
between the period from May 2014 to February 2015.
2.4 Needs Analysis
This is a tabular summary statistics by targeted localities from May 2014 to February 2015 as
recurrent statistics continue to be done covering every county:
Montserrado
County
Margibi
County
Bong County Lofa County Nimba
County
No. of Cases 4898 1292 598 678 337
No. of deaths 2038 582 156 404 137
Total 6936 1874 754 1082 474
Key Notes:
Continuous doubts and deaths: When more quality is added to the Ebola awareness method,
more attention will be claimed by the public and people who continue to doubt will be convicted
to accept that the virus is real. This project will give visualized displays of the virus, how it
harms its victims and how to prevent it. This will be a public PowerPoint sensitization in target
locations of the country.
Lack of attention to the negative social effects: This is one of the psychological dangers
associated with the virus and must not be taken for granted. This project will cement
relationships and ensure that life would once again continue with mutual co-existence among
family members and communities.
http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/outbreaks/2014-west-africa/case-counts.html http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health/ebola-orphans-shunned-in-liberia-guinea-and-sierra-leone/story-fneuz9ev-1227086242451 http://time.com/3537563/ebola-donations/
http://www.lr.undp.org/content/dam/liberia/docs/EBOLA%20INFORMATION/SITREPS/Ebola%20Sitreps%20on%20Liberia/Sitrep%20268%20Feb%207th%202015.pdf
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Sustainability Issue: Ensuring sustainability and ownership is especially challenging since
many emergency projects are implemented without much reference to sustainability issue. The
progress of the self-help projects support to families of victims will be monitored closely to
ensure they achieve their desired outcomes.
3. World Kindness Liberia’s Background
3.1 Overview of World Kindness Liberia
The World Kindness Liberia was registered under the Laws of Liberia as a humanitarian non-for-
profit organization on February 9, 2015 in the midst of the Ebola epidemic in Liberia where the
need for the demonstration of true kindness is at the moment most paramount. The organization
lives to respond to diverse humanitarian situations where kindness is needed for desired outcome
for the betterment of humanity in Liberia. The World Kindness Liberia wishes to extend an SOS
call to every individual, organizations and businesses and urges all to see the Ebola epidemic in
Liberia not as a challenge, but as a fair opportunity to everyone to rapidly respond and share
compassionate kindness to its fullest by helping to save precious lives and restoring hope. The
Ebola virus situation is such that by helping to save another person’s life you save your own live.
Also those who help to contain the Ebola virus outbreak in West Africa will be helping to control
its spread amongst the global community.
4. Project Operations and Description
The purpose for the establishment of the World Kindness Liberia is to foster kindness among
Liberians through diverse kindness related programs as the best time as always, is now.
The purpose of this project therefore is:
To save lives and create the condition for renewed hope.
Project Objectives:
1. To provide more elaborate Ebola awareness in schools and target communities
2. To unite people in Ebola highest affected communities
3. To distribute household materials and meager financial assistance through self-help project
supports to families of Ebola victims
4. To carry out survivors rights advocacy
5. To secure a parcel of land for a well planned orphanage home
4.1 Outputs
To achieve the above objectives, the following outputs are expected:
Objective 1: To provide more elaborate Ebola awareness in schools and communities in
proposed counties
http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/outbreaks/2014-west-africa/case-counts.html http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health/ebola-orphans-shunned-in-liberia-guinea-and-sierra-leone/story-fneuz9ev-1227086242451 http://time.com/3537563/ebola-donations/
http://www.lr.undp.org/content/dam/liberia/docs/EBOLA%20INFORMATION/SITREPS/Ebola%20Sitreps%20on%20Liberia/Sitrep%20268%20Feb%207th%202015.pdf
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Train members of the task force, representatives and members of target communities
Conduct public PowerPoint awareness campaigns
Design leaflets and T-Shirts for task force members and others
Objective 2: To unite people in Ebola highest affected communities
Organize community reconciliation forums
Liaise with community leaderships, traditional elders, church leaders and community youth groups
Objective 3: To distribute materials and meager financial assistance through self-help
project supports to families of Ebola victims and survivals
Collect data from the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare and the National Task Force
on Ebola for first-hand information
Conduct mapping of affected homes
Conduct trainings on self-help initiatives
Distribute materials supplies and meager financial aids through self-help project funding
Objective 4: To carry out survivors’ rights advocacy
Create jingoes
Prepare leaflets
Print t-shirts
Radio and television shows, etc.
Objective 5: To secure a parcel of land for a well planned orphanage home
Purchase the land
Survey the land
Probate the land Deed at the Probate Court
Register the land Deed at the Center for National Documents and Record Archives
Sustainability
The World Kindness Liberia will take the following steps to ensure sustainability in its activities:
Local working Groups: Community leaders, traditional elders, church leaders and community
youth groups trained will be directly answerable to the various groups they represent.
Victims’ families: Reports of self-help progress will be submitted periodically as future supports
will be granted on the basis of the success of the initial meager funding support.
Connectivity: Development of links between World Kindness Liberia and other humanitarian
organizations with similar vision and aspiration.
http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/outbreaks/2014-west-africa/case-counts.html http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health/ebola-orphans-shunned-in-liberia-guinea-and-sierra-leone/story-fneuz9ev-1227086242451 http://time.com/3537563/ebola-donations/
http://www.lr.undp.org/content/dam/liberia/docs/EBOLA%20INFORMATION/SITREPS/Ebola%20Sitreps%20on%20Liberia/Sitrep%20268%20Feb%207th%202015.pdf
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5. Monitoring and Evaluation
To monitor and evaluate the work done:
1. Routine local travels to highly affected counties and reports will be done by management staff.
2. Frequent activities review and emergency plans for onwards activities instituted.
3. Relevant data collected and distributed to sponsors, other agencies and partners.
4. Following the completion of activities in the earmarked counties, it is planned to evaluate all
of the work done and to compile ‘lessons learned’ to ensure more effective implementation of
other succeeding projects.
The proposed monitoring plan is as follows:
Continuous
A) World Kindness Liberia’s task force teams will be supervised by the overseer in the
implementation of activities related to specific objectives.
B) Supervision will be conducted through daily and weekly visits and reports as well as ongoing
monitoring activities to support the project.
Monthly
A) Monthly progress meetings will be held at general level
B) Monthly situation reports on the progress of the project will be sent to the coordinator for
onward submission to the sponsors, donors and partners.
Other
A) The project website will be regularly uploaded with activity reports and other important
information from the field in relation to specific objectives.
B) World kindness Liberia will seek to consult with stakeholders, particularly beneficiaries, staff
and donors about the standards adopted, subsequent projects to be undertaken and mechanism
available for addressing concerns.
Evaluation
Evaluation of the project will be carried out through a post-implementation internal assessment.
Other relevant external/internal evaluations will be carried out during the course of the project; these shall be mentioned in reporting.
Donor Reporting
World Kindness Liberia will submit written reports to the donors in line with their
requirements, and will publish reports on the project website.
http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/outbreaks/2014-west-africa/case-counts.html http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health/ebola-orphans-shunned-in-liberia-guinea-and-sierra-leone/story-fneuz9ev-1227086242451 http://time.com/3537563/ebola-donations/
http://www.lr.undp.org/content/dam/liberia/docs/EBOLA%20INFORMATION/SITREPS/Ebola%20Sitreps%20on%20Liberia/Sitrep%20268%20Feb%207th%202015.pdf
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6. Assumptions and Risks
In the design of this project it is assumed that:
1. Communities served will continue to express the greater desire for more awareness about the
deadly nature of the virus, more reunification efforts and double-fold request for more supplies
and self-help project supports as they currently do and thus there will be a satisfactory degree of
community involvement in the implementation of this project.
2. The security situation is sufficiently stable and conducive to allow for the project
implementation.
3. The environmental conditions including the rainy season does not serve as the necessary
condition for any delay in the implementation drive of this project.
Risks include the following:
Ebola virus is one of the deadliest diseases ever in the history of humankind; thus, accepting to
volunteer in Ebola epidemic intervention denotes:
1. An indirectly signing of one’s own death warrant
2. Agreeing to be ostracized and subjected to neglects
3. Putting your entire family’s existence at stake
4. Dying untimely death for the cause of others
7. Project Budget Items
Materials donations by compassionate individuals and organizations to this project would mean a
boast to this project and of vital significance and will help to reduce cost and accelerate the
progress of the project.
The budget for the project includes items such as:
Recruitment of volunteers
Emergency kits and medical supplies
Trainings and Workshops
Purchase/donation of used vehicle
Running of an office (rent, water, cleaning and maintenance)
Maintenance/repair of office & project equipment
Stationery and supplies
Car maintenance and spare parts
Fuel and lubricants for generators and vehicles
Communications
http://www.cdc.gov/vhf/ebola/outbreaks/2014-west-africa/case-counts.html http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health/ebola-orphans-shunned-in-liberia-guinea-and-sierra-leone/story-fneuz9ev-1227086242451 http://time.com/3537563/ebola-donations/
http://www.lr.undp.org/content/dam/liberia/docs/EBOLA%20INFORMATION/SITREPS/Ebola%20Sitreps%20on%20Liberia/Sitrep%20268%20Feb%207th%202015.pdf
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Computers & accessories
Generators
Tarpaulins
Shovels
Cutlasses
Empty drums
Empty containers
Security (local guards and watchman)
International airfares
Local travels
Used clothes and household materials for victims’ families and survivals of the disease
Self-help project fund
Land for orphanage home