时间:2019-01-09 作者:英语课 分类:VOA常速英语2008年(二月)


英语课
By Nico Colombant
Monrovia
26 February 2008

More and more disabled people in the war-scarred Liberian capital Monrovia are gathering 1 in downtown areas begging for money, saying they are struggling to survive.  The country's health minister says many prefer to beg rather than to look for jobs.  VOA's Nico Colombant met one disabled man, who had recently lost his job, and was trying hard to lead a productive life.  One day later, he was dead.


Se Tua rolled up in a battered 2 wheelchair last Friday on Ashmond Street in central Monrovia, his eyes yellow, wanting to talk about the plight 3 of disabled people in Africa.


"When you are living here, [there is] nobody to take care of you, besides going around, to beg for money," he said.  "When it comes to disgruntled people on the streets, at times, they attack you.  When you get small money, they want to fight you and take it."


He wore dirty clothes, and said he was finding life hard since losing a good job for a security service.  He gave an appointment to talk some more this week. 


A neighbor shows his now empty sleeping place in the back of a hallway.


"He said he fought his friend, a crippled man, and the man knocked him on his back, so he dropped down," he recalled.  "So we picked him up, and brought him, and carried him to the police station. The police post said the place we took him from, we should carry him there.  So we carried him there, but he was already dead, when we carried him.  So, the UNMIL police came, they carried him to go bury him."


Officials at the United Nations peacekeeping mission (UNMIL) confirmed the body had been picked up, but say it appears Tua died of natural causes.


But another handicapped man, a polio-stricken, wheelchair bound office clerk who knew Tua well says he also heard it was a crime.


"The person that did it, he is a handicapped too, but he is a former fighter," he explained.  "He is a Liberian man.  I went there yesterday, but he is not there.  If I see him, he cannot go to the law. I will deal with him the same way. That is all I have to say.  Se is my little brother. I am going to deal with him. I am appealing to the government to do an arrest, but it is not so."


This handicapped man says the government does not protect the disabled, and sometimes arrests them for no reason.


The government's health minister, Walter Gwenigale, says many disabled are war casualties who never went to school because they became child soldiers.  He says some are too embarrassed to get vocational training, because they have never been educated.


He says there used to be a lottery 4 to help them, and that now, many get help from international aid groups.


"Some of the people that are in front of stores, begging, actually have been assisted by Handicap International," he noted 5.  "They have been assisted by the Red Cross. They have been given limbs.  I have spoken to some of them personally.  I have asked them what has happened to their leg that they were given.  Some have said 'oh, the leg does not fit properly.  It hurts when I put it on.' Or, some will say, 'Well I do not have any work to do, so it is easier to come and beg, rather than to go and try to find something to do'."


But one man in central Monrovia remembers Tua fondly and says, he could read and write and that when he was not begging, he used to help people going to school.


"He communicated with people well," he recalled.  "He talked with people well. He learned reading and writing. So sometimes he came around and you got a lesson [from him], he wanted to help you.  [He was] a very clever man."


Not far from where Tua was found, a street cart blares out a sermon.




n.集会,聚会,聚集
  • He called on Mr. White to speak at the gathering.他请怀特先生在集会上讲话。
  • He is on the wing gathering material for his novels.他正忙于为他的小说收集资料。
adj.磨损的;v.连续猛击;磨损
  • He drove up in a battered old car.他开着一辆又老又破的旧车。
  • The world was brutally battered but it survived.这个世界遭受了惨重的创伤,但它还是生存下来了。
n.困境,境况,誓约,艰难;vt.宣誓,保证,约定
  • The leader was much concerned over the plight of the refugees.那位领袖对难民的困境很担忧。
  • She was in a most helpless plight.她真不知如何是好。
n.抽彩;碰运气的事,难于算计的事
  • He won no less than £5000 in the lottery.他居然中了5000英镑的奖券。
  • They thought themselves lucky in the lottery of life.他们认为自己是变幻莫测的人生中的幸运者。
adj.著名的,知名的
  • The local hotel is noted for its good table.当地的那家酒店以餐食精美而著称。
  • Jim is noted for arriving late for work.吉姆上班迟到出了名。
学英语单词
accrual principle
ad banner
adhesive failure
Adidiema
Air Force One
alkaline extracts of soils
angular overlap
arced up
array grammar
assisted memory
average profit
ball off
Baphicacanthus
body centrum
breed reactor
bring sb. in guitly
carbonaceous parting
cast by
chalkboard
check card
Chenopodium aristatum
Chinese speech information processing
class a ip
Clocaenog
coaitis
Command bar
contraband of war
contributing error
debtor country
disc module
Effontil
electronic photogrammetry
fire retardants
flameproof finishing
flat-compound dynamo
FMBs
free quasiparticle approximation
front engine
Geogia holly
hemi-aonil
humic acid combined fertilizer
hydroxylamine rearrangement
illegitimatizes
improper noun
inter-block
kitto
lateral cutaneous nerve of forearm
Linjiang
load variation
marine hydraulic fluid purifier
matzoon milk
mevorah
miner's horn
minor scale division
motion link
mysticality
new sol
nittiness
non-socialist
open-end pipe pile
operate time
oreoselinum
out-of-sequence control rod
output section
plant expansion
polyplastids
pressure surge
quayer
refrigerated rollingstock
regional coding
safety system support features
Saiyid Mūsa
sam-cloth
sand scrubber
Sberman-Chase assay test
seismicity
self-offender
shp
slow neutron filter
spatiotemporal mode
speculative investment
sssasisds-s
Staphylococcus aureus
statutory exemption
stew oneself
Stockhausen
stomatitis aphthosa
tag lines
terabecquerels
terminating power meter
thermal expansion and shrinkage
total ridge count
TTMS (telephone transmission measuring set)
UniData
uniform naming convention
vagueish
villela
watt hour capacity
worked out
yipper