Ebola-hit DR Congo faces 'catastrophic collision' of disease and conflict, WHO warns

Ebola-hit DR Congo faces 'catastrophic collision' of disease and conflict, WHO warns

Reuters A man dressed in white is seen on the right of the image on his mobile phone as his temperature is taken with a contact-free temperature gun. A number of cars are out of focus in the background of the picture.Reuters

DR Congo is the epicentre of the outbreak though a few cases have been detected in Uganda

Ongoing conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo is hampering the Ebola outbreak response, the head of the World Health Organization (WHO) has warned.

Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the east of the country was at the centre of a "catastrophic collision of disease and conflict" with the Ebola outbreak in Ituri province outpacing the response.

In a statement posted on X, Tedros said the WHO "cannot build community trust or isolate the sick while bombs are falling".

He is due to arrive in DR Congo on Wednesday to spearhead scaling up efforts to contain the virus. There have been 220 suspected deaths since the outbreak was declared.

Aid workers have been struggling as travel is difficult because of poor road conditions while conflict and mass displacement have also weakened the health system - as have international aid cuts.

Ituri, where most of the cases have been reported, has been under military rule since 2021, when the civilian authority was replaced by a military general in an attempt to neutralise dozens of armed groups that operate there.

Tedros said stopping transmission in the region "depends entirely on humanitarian access".

"Yet ongoing clashes are driving mass displacement, pushing exposed contacts into overcrowded camps and severing critical containment corridors," he added.

"Frontline workers are risking everything, while attacks on health facilities make tracking cases and their contacts nearly impossible."

He called on all parties to agree to an immediate ceasefire to allow medical teams safe access.

Why does DRC keep battling disease outbreaks?

Concerns over the possible spread of the Ebola outbreak has spurred more countries into imposing strict travel restrictions.

Canada has announced a temporary 90-day entry ban on residents from DR Congo and neighbouring Uganda and South Sudan. The Bahamas also imposed strict rules meaning foreign nationals from those countries face quarantine or isolation measures.

Last week the US banned non-citizens who had travelled to the three places from entering.

The Congolese health authorities say around 1,000 people are currently showing symptoms consistent with Ebola.

The DR Congo country director for the medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has told the BBC it will take several weeks to get proper infrastructure in place to contain the outbreak.

This outbreak is a rare species of Ebola, known as Bundibugyo, for which there are no vaccines or medicines.

DR Congo health authorities have been struggling to confirm cases of the 220 deaths, only 17 people so far have been confirmed by lab tests as having died from the disease.

Medics are also facing a race against time to trace 3,600 people identified as contacts of the infected group.

Some 2,000 tests have been distributed, with a further 4,000 due to be sent out. Experimental treatments - including an antibody developed in the US - could also be introduced soon.

Map of eastern DR Congo and Uganda showing areas affected by an Ebola outbreak. Shaded red regions mark locations with reported cases, concentrated in Ituri province, including Mongwalu, Rwampara, Nyakunde, and nearby Bunia, identified as the site of the first suspected case. Additional smaller affected areas are shown around Butembo, Goma near the Rwanda border, and a location near Kampala in Uganda, where cases were confirmed in travellers from DR Congo. A locator inset highlights the region within Africa.

Ewald Stals, MSF director in DR Congo, said the medical charity and other organisations were working to get medical supplies and workers in to the epicentre of the crisis but insecurity and poor transport links in Ituri province made it difficult.

"Slowly but surely, there is, of course, some activity going on, but overall, we're still far behind having a control on the situation," he told the BBC.

"So we still do not have a full picture of what is happening, and that is mainly like to insufficient testing.

"So we need more testing, we need more diagnosis to make sure that we get a full picture of what is going on - so we do not have that for the moment. And as long as that is the case, we kind of can say that we're running behind the virus, that the virus is still ahead of us, and that we really have to catch up."

On Wednesday morning the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) said it would be increasing its presence on the ground.

The ECDC said more of its experts would be deployed via the EU Health Task Force.

Additional reporting by Emery Makumeno in Kinshasa and Barbara Plett Usher in Nairobi

More from the BBC on the Ebola outbreak:

Getty Images/BBC A woman looking at her mobile phone and the graphic BBC News AfricaGetty Images/BBC

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