
Liberia Breaks Ground on Surgery Theater in Pleebo
After years of requests from residents, Liberia's government has started building an operating theater at Pleebo Health Center. The new facility will allow patients to receive surgical care locally instead of traveling long distances for treatment.
Patients in Pleebo, Liberia, will soon have access to life-saving surgeries right in their own community, ending years of difficult journeys for medical care.
The Government of Liberia broke ground Monday on a modern operating theater at Pleebo Health Center, a project that locals are calling a dream come true. Construction began on January 26, 2026, with health officials, city leaders, and community members gathering to celebrate the milestone.
The Ministry of Health is funding the entire project, which Sherue Construction Company will complete within four months. The facility is designed to meet modern medical standards and includes space for future growth.
Medical Director Dr. Prince F. Foko explained that the new theater will allow doctors to perform cesarean sections, hernia repairs, and other major and minor surgeries that currently require anesthesia. Until now, patients needing these procedures had to travel to J.J. Dossen Referral Hospital, often facing dangerous delays.

Pleebo City Mayor Larry Geekor called the groundbreaking "a dream come true" and thanked the national government for finally answering the community's long-standing request. Partners In Health-Liberia also praised the dedication of Pleebo's medical staff and pledged continued support for the center.
The Ripple Effect
This operating theater means more than convenient care for Pleebo residents. Pregnant women facing complications will no longer risk their lives traveling hours for emergency cesarean sections. Farmers with hernias can get treatment without losing days of work and income traveling to distant hospitals.
The facility will serve not just Pleebo City but surrounding communities, bringing quality surgical care to thousands of people who previously had limited options. Local healthcare workers will gain valuable experience performing procedures they once had to refer elsewhere.
When the theater opens its doors in just four months, it represents something bigger than a building: it's proof that communities who keep advocating for better healthcare can create real change.
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Based on reporting by AllAfrica - Health
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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