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BackEbola Outbreak Sparks Fear and Economic Concerns in DRC's Ituri Province
Ebola Outbreak Sparks Fear and Economic Concerns in DRC's Ituri Province
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Guardian International5/18/2026Health4 min read

Ebola Outbreak Sparks Fear and Economic Concerns in DRC's Ituri Province

Quick Look

  • Ebola outbreak in DRC's Ituri province causes panic, economic worries, and dozens of deaths.
  • The rare Bundibugyo strain lacks a vaccine, and ongoing conflict complicates containment efforts.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

An outbreak of the rare Bundibugyo strain of Ebola, which has no approved vaccine, has been declared a public health emergency of international concern by the WHO. The outbreak is occurring in Ituri province, Democratic Republic of the Congo, a region already struggling with poverty, armed conflict, and a weakened health system.

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On public transport, in bars and at mass gatherings, everyone is talking about Ebola,” said Gloire Mumbesa, 38, a resident of Mongbwalu, a mining town in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. He said cases of the disease had been reported locally and panic was engulfing the area because of the lack of a vaccine for the Bundibudyo strain. “The fear is that this disease may spread to many other areas.

Residents of Ituri province in eastern DRC, where the World Health Organization announced an outbreak of Ebola last week, are living in growing fear of the possible continued spread of the disease and its deadly impacts, nearly six years after the last outbreak in the region ended.

“We’re stunned by the resurgence of Ebola in our region,” said Dieudonné Lossadekana, 51, a civil society coordinator in Bunia city, where the first suspected case was reported. “We’ve already recorded several dozen deaths. For us, it is heartbreaking.”

The economic impacts of the outbreak are a key worry, with residents concerned that authorities may impose restrictions that would hinder them from earning a living in a region plagued by armed conflict and where people are already struggling financially.

“We live in a region where poverty is rife and people live from hand to mouth,” said Claude Kasuna, 48, in Irumu territory. “When a health emergency like this one strikes, it hits us hard economically.”

The WHO director general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, declared the outbreak a “public health emergency of international concern” after more than 300 suspected cases and 88 deaths were reported in the DRC and two deaths in neighbouring Uganda.

The majority of the deaths and suspected cases have been reported in Ituri province, a business centre and migratory hub that borders Uganda and South Sudan. The gold-rich province is the centre of a long-running conflict between militias allied to the Hema and the Lendu, who are fighting over land and the mineral. The fighting has killed more than 50,000 people since 1999.

A health worker who was the first suspected case reported fever, haemorrhaging, vomiting and other symptoms on 24 April and died at a medical centre in Bunia, according to the WHO.

Jean Pierre Badombo, a former mayor of Mongbwalu, a mining town in Ituri at the centre of the outbreak, told Reuters that people started falling ill in mid-April after a large open-casket funeral procession arrived from Bunia. “After that, we experienced a cascade of deaths,” he said.

On Monday the Congolese health minister, Samuel Roger Kamba, said the government would open three treatment centres for Ebola in Ituri.

The WHO regional office for Africa said on Sunday that 35 experts from the organisation and seven tons of emergency medical supplies and equipment had arrived in Bunia.

Elsewhere in eastern DRC, one case was reported in rebel-controlled Goma, a woman who travelled to the city from Bunia where her husband had died of the disease.

Heather Kerr, the DRC country director at the International Rescue Committee, said the conflict in the region made containing the Ebola outbreak “all the harder”. “Eastern DRC’s years of conflict and displacement have left health systems on their knees,” she said. “With dozens of lives already lost and an already overstretched health system, we need to act fast.”

Manenji Mangundu, the DRC country director at Oxfam, said the outbreak was “hitting a country already stretched to breaking point” due to ongoing conflict and years of aid cuts.

First identified in 1976 in what is now the DRC, Ebola is a highly contagious and often fatal viral disease that affects humans and non-human primates. It spreads through body fluids or contaminated materials and causes organ damage, blood vessel impairment and sometimes severe internal and external bleeding.

WHO has said the current outbreak involves the rare Bundibugyo variant, which has no approved treatment or vaccine. It is named after the district in western Uganda where it was first discovered in 2007.

Jean-Jacques Muyembe-Tamfum, the director general of the National Institute of Biomedical Research in the DRC and a co-discoverer of the Ebola virus, said some candidate compounds for a Bundibugyo vaccine were expected to enter trials by the end of May or in June.

In the meantime, he said, the government was implementing public health preventive measures including protecting healthcare workers and treating cases based on symptoms. “This is how we brought the Bundibugyo strain outbreak under control in 2012 in Isiro, not far from Ituri,” he said.

This is the 17th Ebola outbreak in the DRC. From August 2018 to June 2020, the country recorded the second largest outbreak of the disease in history globally, and the country’s deadliest, centred in North Kivu and Ituri provinces. It caused more than 2,000 deaths.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Candidate compounds for a Bundibugyo vaccine will enter trials.

    Likely · Within weeks

Open Questions

  • What is the exact transmission rate of this Bundibugyo strain?
  • How effective will the public health preventive measures be in controlling the outbreak?
  • What is the timeline for the Bundibugyo vaccine trials?
  • What specific restrictions might authorities impose, and what will be their economic impact?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Guardian International.

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