Eric Duncan's Sister |
In an extraordinary interview with MailOnline,
Mary Pearson claimed that Ebola virus was created as part of an
experiment to infect black people on the continent - echoing the views
of a race-hate preacher who says Ebola was invented to 'depopulate'
Africa.
Mrs Pearson, 52, who runs a general store in Liberian capital Monrovia, said:
'What we heard is that Ebola was created by the Americans and they sent
it to kill us. 'You are the ones that sent it to kill us. They sent the
virus and infected people here.Then they blamed Liberians for Ebola.
They killed that boy for nothing.'
Thomas Eric Duncan died in Dallas on October 8 after flying to the US
from Liberia three weeks earlier. He was infected when he helped a
pregnant neighbour seek hospital treatment.
Mrs Pearson insisted that her brother did not receive the same level of
care as American citizens who had contracted the disease and were taken
back to the US for treatment. It comes as the Texas Presbyterian
Hospital accused of failing in his care was forced to settle with Mr
Duncan's family in a secret deal.
Of the nine people who have been treated for Ebola in the U.S., only Duncan has died
His nephew Josephus Weeks said:
'We begged. We pleaded. I even offered my own blood, even though it wouldn't do anything for him.
We requested everything we could think of to save Eric. They said no.'
Mrs Pearson said:
'Eric suffered in exile and it really hurts me.They didn't feel sorry
for him. They didn't give him drugs. They had the means to treat him but
they treated him like a dog. 'They are wicked. They didn't treat him
because they said he brought Ebola to America.'
Duncan was infected on October 15 when he went to help out a pregnant
neighbour, Marthaline Williams, 19, who was sick and needed to get to
hospital. There was no ambulance available so Duncan loaded her into a
taxi and took her himself.
Williams died from Ebola the following day. On 19 September, Duncan flew to the US to join his family there.
Now, as she dwells on the memories of her brother, Mrs Pearson said she
is concerned at spreading conspiracy theories in Liberia that the virus
was created by the U.S.
She said she gave credence to the rumours because of how her brother was treated after he arrived in America.
Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan has made wild claims that the
virus was designed by white scientists specifically to kill off black
people - conspiracy theories repeated by villagers in parts of the
country.
A distrust of Western medicine and belief in faith healers have seen locals ignore attempts at isolating infected patients.
The 81-year-old, who has previously made similar claims about Aids, wrote:
'There is a weapon that can be put in a room where there are black and
white people, and it will kill only the black and spare the white,
because it is a genotype weapon that is designed for your genes, for
your race, for your kind.
Mrs Pearson's fears are fuelled by the fact that he was apparently well
when he left Africa, as his symptoms had not yet started to develop.
'I hugged him and I was ruffling his hair because he was always cleaning his hair,' said Mrs Pearson.
'He was happy. We were all happy that day. His son had sent for him and he was going to America to see him.'
Duncan worked as a driver for a firm which contracted for FedEx. He had
left the job a couple of weeks earlier, said Pearson, after an accident
when he cut his knee. When he arrived in the US he called home to say
all was well.
'He said pray for me,' she said.
But he gave no reason for asking for their prayers and she did not ask. They first heard he was ill on October 1.
'We didn't hear from him until we heard that someone from here had
tested positive for Ebola. Then someone called from FedEx to say that he
was sick. I was feeling bad. I called my sister. He couldn't talk
himself.'
Duncan presented himself for treatment at the Texas Health Presbyterian
Hospital in Dallas on September 25. Despite a high temperature, he was
sent home after tests. Three days later he was back, this time
transported to the hospital by ambulance. His condition had
deteriorated. This time he was tested for Ebola and the results came
back positive the next day.
He died on October 8. Although they had been in close contact with him,
the family knew that Ebola was not contagious until the symptoms start
to show.
'We knew that he didn't have the sickness here so we felt that we were
OK,' 'But he had interacted with everyone so we imposed a quarantine on
ourselves. No-one official came to do anything.
They started to hear that other neighbours who had helped the Williams family had also died.
'The pastor contracted the virus and died and his wife died and the
pastor's son and another lady, Marie, she died too. Plenty people died.
More than eight people.'
Everyone knew Duncan was their relative and everyone was afraid of them, she said.
'In the first place no-one would come to my shop. But then my daughter said to reopen the shop.
People started to come, but one at a time, because they were afraid. it
was not until 21 days had gone [the length of the quarantine period]
that they started to come back properly.'