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In Riots Sparked By An Ebola Quarantine, A Teen Is Shot And Dies

Shakie Kamara lies on the ground with a bullet wound in his leg cries for help.
Tommy Trenchard for NPR
Shakie Kamara lies on the ground with a bullet wound in his leg cries for help.

A teenage boy should not die from gunshot wounds to his legs.

But that was the fate of 15-year-old Shakie Kamara.

On Monday, people in the neighborhood of West Point were angry that they'd been quarantined — a government step to prevent the spread of Ebola to other parts of Monrovia, the capital city of Liberia. Crowds of protesters tried to get past the checkpoints.

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Soldiers opened fire. Kamara was wounded.

The teen was screaming, crying for help. Photographer Tommy Trenchard was on the scene, covering the story for NPR. He took a picture of Kamara, then tried to get an ambulance to come. Thompson called people he knew in Monrovia. They told him that even before Ebola struck, the country's health care system was a shambles. They didn't know how to find an ambulance.

After a half an hour, an army medic arrived to treat the wounded teenager.

He was eventually taken to Redemption Hospital. Dr. Mohammed Sankoh, the hospital's medical director, told The New York Times that the cause of death was loss of blood and hypothermic shock.

Liberia's defense minister Brownie Samukai had a different perspective. He said, "It was not a bullet that went down there...Due to the stampede he fell and that's how he got wounded."

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The people of West Point do not believe the government's story.

Either way, it is clear: A teenage boy should not die from a leg wound. But that's what happened in West Point this week. The story shows how Ebola can claim the lives of Liberians even if they are not infected by the deadly virus.

Copyright 2014 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.