DRC Reports Record Daily Ebola Cases Amid Accelerating Outbreak
En resumen
- The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) reported a record 72 new Ebola cases in 24 hours, bringing the total to 782 infected and 181 deaths.
- The outbreak, caused by the rare Bundibugyo strain, is accelerating due to conflict, patient escapes, and poor contact tracing, with Ituri province as the epicenter.
Resumen generado por IA
Por qué importa
The Democratic Republic of the Congo is experiencing an accelerating Ebola outbreak, with a record daily increase in infections. The Bundibugyo virus strain, which has no approved vaccine or treatment, is spreading due to regional conflict, patient escapes, and limited contact tracing.
The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has reported a record daily increase in infections as the Ebola outbreak impacting the country appears to accelerate.
The Ministry of Public Health confirmed on Sunday that 72 new cases had been diagnosed over the previous 24 hours, bringing the number of infected to 782. The death toll has also grown, with another 32 people dying to push the total to 181 deaths.
The rising numbers come as regional conflict, patient escapes, and limited contact tracing undermine containment efforts. Alarm was sounded last week as the virus moved into new areas of the DRC.
The Bundibugyo virus strain has a 22.8 percent death rate so far, with 40 patients recovering, officials said.
“We remain committed to supporting affected countries until transmission is stopped. We call on partners and donors to urgently mobilise resources to strengthen the response and save lives,” Jean Kaseya, director general of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, said on Sunday.
The outbreak stems from the rare Bundibugyo strain, which has no approved vaccine or treatment, unlike the Zaire virus responsible for the DRC’s previous 16 Ebola outbreaks.
Contact tracing coverage has plummeted to 56.5 percent, a sharp decline from the 95% target, Health Ministry officials said.
Doctors Without Borders, known by its French initials MSF, warned that “no one knows the true scale” of the outbreak due to dangerous gaps in surveillance and testing.
Eastern Ituri province remains the outbreak’s epicentre, harbouring nearly 95 percent of all confirmed cases. The virus has since breached into North Kivu and South Kivu provinces and spread across the border to Uganda.
Ituri’s humanitarian crisis exacerbates the medical emergency. Nearly one million residents have fled overlapping armed conflicts involving multiple groups, including the M23 rebel movement that controls Goma, the capital of North Kivu province. The area has endured decades of instability, with United Nations reports documenting massacres of more than 100 civilians in gold-rich Ituri villages as various factions vie for control of the region’s mineral wealth.
Thousands of artisanal miners routinely shuttle between clandestine mining sites scattered across the mineral-dense region, creating transmission hotspots that evade health monitoring. The outbreak is believed to have originated in the mining-intensive Mongbwalu Health Zone in Ituri province.
The World Health Organization announced it is ramping up diagnostic testing and contact surveillance operations. However, MSF reports a critical funding gap of $21.5m hampering response efforts.
Preguntas abiertas
- What is the true scale of the outbreak?
- How will funding gaps be addressed?
- What is the impact of ongoing conflict on containment?





