The Star Malaysia

Cleaning day in Sierra Leone

President Julius Maada Bio initiates a campaign to improve hygiene in the city.

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Sierra Leone held its first “National Cleaning Day” under new President Julius Maada Bio as part of a campaign to improve hygiene and the work rate of civil servants.

In the capital Freetown’s largest slum Kroo Bay hundreds of men and women on Saturday sifted through tons of household rubbish and plastic waste that had been clogging the drainage system.

Trader Adama Kamara who lives in the slum said he was pleased that Bio was trying to improve the environmen­t “because our country is too dirty”.

So much household waste is dumped in gutters that they constantly become blocked causing flooding during the rains, he said.

“After the cleaning, the water can now easily flow through the drainage and empty into the sea, so I appreciate that and I’m happy for that,” he added. Michael Aboidu Frazer, a fisherman , said the clean-up would have a big effect on the slum dwellers.

The area is “among the disaster prone communitie­s in Freetown with perennial flooding problems which often cause deaths and damage to properties during the rainy season,” he said.

The clean-up was announced by Bio’s office last month, two days after a rally in which the new leader, a former general who was briefly in power in the 1990s, said he would be a stickler for “discipline”.

Cleaning days will be held on the first Saturday of each month, a statement issued by the presidency said.

Health and Sanitation Minister Alpha Tijan Wurie said there was much work to be done.

“I love the enthusiasm of the people ... they clearly want to get their environmen­t very clean,” he said.

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 ?? — AFP ?? Working together: Residents participat­ing in the first ‘National Cleaning Day’ in Freetown.
— AFP Working together: Residents participat­ing in the first ‘National Cleaning Day’ in Freetown.

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