The Philippine Star

Tide turns against Liberia’s biggest slum

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MONROVIA (AFP) – The fishermen, hustlers and market traders of West Point have survived two civil wars and an Ebola epidemic, but this resilient Liberian slum cannot hold back the ocean that is slowly swallowing it.

The country’s biggest township is being swallowed by the sea, tearing the heart out of one of the capital’s liveliest neighborho­ods and leaving the government struggling to rehouse thousands of displaced residents.

“Sometimes at 2 a.m. when you’re sleeping the waves will go straight on top of the house. Before you come to, everybody is confused; you’re soaked with water,” said Cecelia Nimley, 56, a lifelong resident of West Point.

“The swell will just wipe away things. I sent my grandchild­ren to some friends and the big ones are on their own,” she said, describing losing her house and all her possession­s to the waves.

The shacks are stacked together any which way, built from a variety of reclaimed materials.

Sitting on a peninsula, jutting into the Atlantic Ocean, the slum is being hit by rising seas – a consequenc­e of global warming – and coastal erosion, say local officials.

West Point’s residents have long battled poverty and drug addiction is rife in the area. The community was torn apart when the Ebola virus struck. But the encroachin­g sea water is adding to the struggle to meet basic needs.

“When it comes, the water in the wells gets salty, and we can no longer use it for drinking or cooking,” said Amie Myers, 33, a mother of six children.

Some 90,000 people live in West Point, which covers just four square kilometers – a fraction bigger than New York’s Central Park – and this area is shrinking by the day.

Some of the displaced have been living in markets, on the roadside or in the living rooms of friends for upwards of a year.

End of seaside community

Fishing has traditiona­lly been the main commercial activity in West Point, but many are now having to abandon their life on the sea.

Fisherman Amos Doe, 45, stood by what remains of his house, now smashed into two by the Atlantic.

“It makes me feel sad because you know as a family man, living beside the water, there is no guaranteed place that will make you say ‘I got hope for my lifetime’,” Doe said glumly.

The authoritie­s said at least 4,000 people were made homeless in April alone, and are allocating temporary shelters to families further inland.

President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf visited the stricken community in May, which was hit less than two years ago by Ebola spreading like wildfire in a place where everyone lives cheek-by-jowl.

At the height of the epidemic the whole slum was quarantine­d, leading clubwieldi­ng youths to storm a medical facility treating Ebola patients. This was followed by a riot against security forces.

Bendu Quaye lost the father of her five children to Ebola, and the 27-year-old is one of the few who has been rehoused after staying with a married friend for months.

“I was sleeping on the floor, beside the bed, with my kids,” Quaye told AFP.

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