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Health

Suspected Ebola cases in eastern DR Congo pass 900 as health workers struggle with aid cuts – France 24

Editorial Staff
Last updated: May 25, 2026 2:55 am
Editorial Staff
2 hours ago
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As the number of suspected Ebola cases in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo pass 900, health workers say that the chaos left by years of fighting and local government failures has been compounded by sweeping cuts to international aid budgets.
Issued on: 24/05/2026 – 21:17
The number of suspected Ebola cases in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo passed 900 as of Sunday, Congolese authorities said.
The burning last week of health centres in two towns at the heart of the outbreak exposed the anger in a region beset by violence linked to armed rebel groups, mass displacement, the failure of local government and international aid cuts that experts say have stripped health facilities in vulnerable communities.
“A devastating set of emergencies are converging,” said the Physicians for Human Rights nonprofit. 
Read moreUganda confirms three new Ebola cases as Africa CDC warns 10 countries ‘at risk’
Before the outbreak, Doctors Without Borders said in an assessment that the insecurity in Ituri had worsened recently, causing doctors and nurses to flee and leaving overwhelmed health facilities in “catastrophic conditions”.
The Rwanda-backed AFC/M23 rebels are in control of parts of the region. While the Congolese government still largely controls the northeastern Ituri Province, which is the epicentre of the Ebola outbreak, that control is tenuous. The Allied Democratic Forces, a Ugandan Islamist group linked to the Islamic State (IS) group, is one of the dominant rebel forces there and responsible for violent attacks against civilian targets.
The UN humanitarian office says almost a million people have been displaced from their homes by conflict in Ituri. 
That means this Ebola outbreak is “unfolding in communities already facing insecurity, displacement and fragile health care systems”, said Gabriela Arenas, a regional coordinator at the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.
There are concerns the disease might spread to the large displacement camps near the city of Bunia, where the first cases were reported.
The Congolese Ministry of Communication, in a post to X on Sunday, said that there were 904 suspected cases and 119 suspected deaths, mostly in Ituri. That was a significant jump from the previously announced more than 700 suspected Ebola cases, though suspected deaths were revised down from more than 170 announced earlier. The change in the number of fatalities could not immediately be explained.
Cases have also been reported in two other eastern provinces, North Kivu and South Kivu, where the AFC/M23 rebels are in control, and also in the neighbouring country of Uganda.
As a result, the outbreak in DR Congo is being managed by the government and in part by rebel authorities, with an array of aid agencies also helping.
Watch moreHealth workers struggle with Ebola outbreak as WHO declares highest risk level in DR Congo
Health experts say international aid cuts last year by the United States and other rich nations had been devastating for eastern DR Congo.
The cuts “reduced the capacity to detect and respond to infectious disease outbreaks”, said Thomas McHale, public health director at Physicians for Human Rights. DR Congo has had more than a dozen previous Ebola outbreaks.
Aid groups fighting this outbreak on the ground say they don’t have the equipment they need, such as face shields and suits to protect health workers from infection, testing kits, and body bags and other materials needed to safely bury the bodies of victims, which can be highly contagious.
“We have made requests to different partners, but we have not yet really received anything,” said Julienne Lusenge, president of Women’s Solidarity for Inclusive Peace and Development, an aid group operating a small hospital near Bunia.
“We only have hand sanitiser and a few masks for the nurses,” she said.
The Bundibugyo type of Ebola virus responsible for the outbreak has no approved vaccine or treatment.
The burning of treatment centres in the Rwampara and Mongbwalu areas – which have the highest Ebola case counts – show how a backlash in some communities is further complicating the response.
Colin Thomas-Jensen, director of impact at the Aurora Humanitarian Initiative, said the attacks may reflect the “built-in skepticism and anger” of people in eastern DR Congo over how the region has been treated, with years of violence from foreign-linked rebel groups and a failure of their government and international peacekeepers to protect them, he said.
Another source of anger has been the strict protocols around the burial of suspected victims of Ebola, which authorities are taking charge of wherever they can to prevent further spread of the disease in traditional burials – when families prepare the bodies and people gather for a funeral.
The first burning of an Ebola center in Rwampara was by a group of local young men trying to retrieve a friend’s body, according to witnesses and police. The witnesses said the crowd accused the foreign aid group operating there of lying about Ebola.
Authorities in northeastern DR Congo have now banned funeral wakes and gatherings of more than 50 people, and armed soldiers and police are guarding some burials carried out by aid workers.
(FRANCE 24 with AP)
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