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The DR Congo’s ۱۷th Ebola epidemic is fuelled by the Bundibugyo virus, with no existing vaccine or approved treatment options.
Published On ۶ Jul ۲۰۲۶
The death toll from the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DR Congo) has risen above ۵۰۰, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), as health workers threaten strike action over low wages and poor working conditions.
The data released on Monday, based on reports from Congolese health authorities, showed that at least ۵۰۶ deaths and ۱,۵۶۱ confirmed Ebola cases have been recorded in the country, according to a WHO situation report dated July ۴. In neighbouring Uganda, the toll remained at two deaths and ۲۰ confirmed cases.
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Ebola, which is transmitted through contact with bodily fluids and causes haemorrhagic fever, has killed more than ۱۵,۰۰۰ people in Africa over the past ۵۰ years. The deadliest outbreak in the DR Congo resulted in nearly ۲,۳۰۰ deaths out of ۳,۵۰۰ recorded cases between ۲۰۱۸ and ۲۰۲۰.
The ۱۷th epidemic in the DR Congo, officially declared on May ۱۵, is caused by the Bundibugyo virus, for which there is neither a vaccine nor a treatment.
A clinical trial involving two treatments for this rare strain began on Thursday, according to the WHO, which also granted emergency use authorisation for the first molecular diagnostic test for the virus.
Officials have yet to identify the outbreak’s patient zero and still need to trace possibly tens of thousands of people who have come in contact with infected individuals.
The first month of this Ebola outbreak was already the worst on record, the WHO has said.
In the mining town of Mongbwalu in Ituri province, considered the starting point of the epidemic, the high lethality of ۵۰.۷ percent suggests persistent challenges in early management and access to care for the sick.
Strike threat
The crisis in the province has been further compounded by front-line health workers threatening to go on strike on Monday over unpaid benefits and poor working conditions.
In a notice to the government, a copy of which was seen by the AP news agency, workers both in and outside hospitals said they had not been paid benefits since the outbreak began and they do not have adequate supplies for their work.
They also complained of poor salaries, the “arrogance” of teams sent from the DR Congo’s capital of Kinshasa, and the “excessive” use of labour from other provinces without prioritising local labor in Ituri, as well as the lack of adequate equipment.
The virus is also present in the provinces near North Kivu and South Kivu, where the provincial capitals and large swathes of territory are controlled by the anti-government armed group M۲۳.
In North Kivu, the mortality rate of ۵۷.۴ percent, significantly higher than the average, is considered “worrying” by Congolese health authorities.
In South Kivu province, no cases have been confirmed since May ۲۶.
Health authorities in the M۲۳ region announced last week that the epidemic had been eradicated in the controlled areas.

