
Five Ebola patients recover in DR Congo as WHO chief opens new treatment center in Bunia amid rapidly spreading outbreak
Five people have recovered from the rare Bundibugyo strain of Ebola in eastern DR Congo, the WHO chief announced Sunday, offering a rare glimmer of hope as the outbreak surpasses 1,000 suspected cases and 246 deaths.
A rare recovery milestone
Five patients infected with the Bundibugyo strain of Ebola have recovered, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus announced during a visit to Bunia, the epicenter of the outbreak in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo. Four were discharged on Sunday and one on Friday, marking the first documented recoveries of confirmed Bundibugyo patients during the current outbreak. The Bundibugyo variant has no approved vaccine or treatment, and the US CDC estimates a fatality rate of 25 to 50 percent.
Of course, we're still working on vaccines and treatments but that doesn't mean that people cannot recover from Ebola.
Tedros stressed that early treatment is critical. "If you come to health facilities when you have symptoms, you can get the support and recover, so the key is to come forward as early as possible and to get the necessary support," he said at the inauguration of a new Ebola treatment center in Bunia, the provincial capital of Ituri.
The outbreak's alarming trajectory
The outbreak was declared roughly two weeks ago and has since escalated rapidly. The Africa CDC reported over 1,000 suspected cases and 246 deaths in DR Congo as of Thursday. The WHO cited 906 suspected cases and 223 suspected deaths. Neighboring Uganda has confirmed nine cases and one death, with two new cases confirmed on Friday.
Never before has an Ebola epidemic recorded so many cases so soon after its declaration.
Dr. Alan Gonzales, deputy director of MSF, called the situation "deeply alarming" in a statement Saturday, noting that response efforts have failed to keep pace with the virus's spread. "The reality today is that no one knows the true scale and severity of this epidemic. New suspected cases are reported daily, but hundreds of samples remain untested," he said.
Obstacles to containment
The response is severely hampered by ongoing armed conflict in the region. Attacks by the Allied Democratic Forces, a rebel group allied with the Islamic State group, and a coalition of ethnic militias have disrupted health operations in Ituri. The Rwanda-backed M23 rebel group, which controls key cities including Goma and Bukavu in North Kivu and South Kivu provinces, has reported two cases. Border and airport closures have also delayed containment efforts and humanitarian deliveries.
Community resistance poses another major challenge. Residents have launched at least three attacks against health centers, angered by stringent medical protocols for handling victims' bodies that clash with local burial rites. Misinformation and conspiracy theories are fueling further resistance to testing, tracing, and isolation measures.
We can stop this Ebola and anyone who has it can also recover. But the rule... is this thing is everybody's business and every citizen should be involved.
A message of hope
Pierre Akilimali, incident manager at DR Congo's National Institute of Public Health, offered reassurance during the treatment center opening. "The message we would like to share with the Ituri community is that there is hope," he said, noting that with the symptomatic treatment currently offered, patients are recovering. Tedros assured the affected communities of international support, declaring, "You are not alone."
- Ebola outbreak in eastern DR Congo becomes publicly known, roughly two weeks before WHO chief's visit.
- First documented recovery of a confirmed Bundibugyo patient during the current outbreak, per WHO.
- MSF deputy director calls the situation 'deeply alarming,' warns response is failing to keep pace.
- WHO chief opens new treatment center in Bunia; four more patients discharged, bringing total recoveries to five.
Regional and international concern
The WHO has triggered an international health alert. Cuts to foreign aid and limited resources have further weakened the response, raising fears of wider regional spread. The virus has now been detected in three Congolese provinces — Ituri, North Kivu, and South Kivu — as well as in Uganda. MSF has called for the immediate expansion of testing, faster deployment of aid workers, and sustained access to medical supplies.


