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As the number of diagnosed Ebola cases nears 9,000, with 4,493 deaths recorded, ChildFund Liberia continues to assist children orphaned by the virus.

For the next three days (until Oct. 20), you can listen to a BBC interview (go to the 44-minute mark) with Billy Abimbilla, national director of Liberia and Sierra Leone, and Ebola survivor and volunteer Decontee Davis about the Interim Care Centre started for Liberian children affected by the deadly virus. It’s a remarkable story, and Billy reports that Liberians are volunteering to foster and adopt children orphaned by Ebola.

Billy told BBC that the centre has taken in children ranging in age from teenagers down to a two-week-old orphan.

“The situation is grim on the ground and a lot of people are getting infected,” Billy said. “Many others are dying from the infection. As a child protection agency, we are moved by what we see in children €“ the way they suffer, the way they are stigmatised, sometimes abandoned by their communities and relatives. That gives us the motivation to see what we can do for such unfortunate children.”

Asked what kind of support ChildFund is providing for these children, he said: “We make the house in which they stay child-friendly. We have recreational activities, such as toys, see-saws, swings. We have footballs and play materials, children`s reading materials. So they occupy themselves with these activities.

“As part of the activities at the Interim Care Centres, we also try and do psychosocial counselling with these children so they can get over the stress and trauma. And if we find foster parents for them, we follow up and give some support in terms of counselling for the foster parents, and continue with psychosocial support for the children. This will take some time for them to get over because of what they have gone through.”

The centre relies on volunteers such as 23-year-old Decontee Davis, who contracted Ebola while caring for her fiancee`s aunt. After very nearly dying she pulled through and her experience made her determined to help these orphaned children.

“I can take good care of them because I`m no longer vulnerable to the disease,” Decontee said. “I decided to work [at the centre], take them on as my own. I recognise them as my own children. As long as the kids are there, I will continue to work with them.”

ChildFund Liberia, in collaboration with the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare (MOHSW), has opened the first dedicated children`s Interim Care Centre in the Liberian capital, Monrovia, for children who have lost one or both parents to Ebola.

An initial 20 children moved into the centre on Monday, 6 October. Eight Ebola survivors have been recruited as temporary caregivers, and a nurse, social workers and a mental health worker will provide additional support for these children.

“More than 2,000 children have been orphaned by Ebola in Liberia,” said Billy Abimbilla, ChildFund International`s national director for Liberia and Sierra Leone. “In addition to the tragedy of losing parents, these children are being traumatised by the stigma associated with the virus. They have nowhere else to go.”

The centre will provide care, support and protection for affected children for a quarantine period of 21 days from the time they last had close contact with a person diagnosed with Ebola. In addition to housing and meals, the children will be provided with play and reading materials and receive counselling from carers who have survived Ebola and are now immune.

Staff at the centre will closely observe and monitor the children for the development of Ebola symptoms, through twice-daily testing of temperature and using a checklist of symptomology, and take immediate action to refer such children to the nearest Ebola Treatment Unit or Ebola Care Centre as appropriate.

There will also be active tracing of children`s relatives to facilitate family reunification after the quarantine period is over. If extended family are not willing or able to care for the child, alternative options such as foster care will be sought.

ChildFund Australia CEO Nigel Spence said: “The number of children orphaned and stigmatised by Ebola is increasing by the day. A centre like this is critical to provide a protective environment for these children and help them process the grief and trauma they are experiencing.”

The MOHSW together with ChildFund will be establishing additional Interim Care Centres in Liberia to support the increasing number of children orphaned by Ebola.

Additional funds provided by ChildFund Australia will also be used to establish an Interim Care Centre in the hard-hit Bombali district of Sierra Leone.