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Fear has gripped Ebola-affected areas in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo as the suspected death toll continues to climb, with officials acknowledging they are struggling to contain an outbreak that may have been spreading undetected.
“Ebola has tortured us,” says a taxi rider in his late twenties in the gold-mining town of Rwampara.
“I am scared because people are dying very fast… We are really afraid.”
After visiting Ituri province, the outbreak’s epicenter, over the weekend, Congolese Health Minister Dr. Samuel Roger Kamba admitted that health teams are playing catch-up with a virus that may have been circulating earlier than its first detection on 24 April.
The presumed patient zero is a nurse who died in the provincial capital Bunia but was buried in Mongwalu, also a gold-mining town. Most of the suspected cases and deaths have occurred there and in neighboring Rwampara.
Rwampara resident Fred Kiza told the BBC that “there is fear,” which he calls “normal when there’s a disease like this.”
“It would be good if they gave us masks to protect ourselves.”
As of Tuesday, officials report 513 suspected cases and at least 136 deaths. One person has also died in neighboring Uganda.
Cases have also been identified in Butembo city and rebel-controlled Goma in North Kivu province, as well as in South Kivu province.
Health officials say several deaths occurred in the community without being reported to authorities, meaning they could not be investigated at the time.
According to the health ministry, formal community alerts were only registered from 8 May.
“At community level, this hasn’t been effective,” Dr. Kamba explained. “It means someone may have died before him [the presumed index case], or someone else may have been sick before him, but no one reported it.”
He added: “We really need to look within the community to understand what happened – how people became ill and sometimes even died without any report being filed.”
The outbreak stems from the Bundibugyo strain of Ebola. DR Congo, which is facing its 17th Ebola outbreak, is more familiar with the Zaïre species.
Bundibugyo has caused only two previous outbreaks – in 2007 and 2012 – where it killed around 30% of infected individuals.
Dr. Kamba explained the symptoms: “There is heavy bleeding everywhere, very high fever. But Bundibugyo can show fewer obvious signs, which delays diagnosis because people think, ‘No, this is just malaria.'”
That delay, officials say, may have allowed the virus to spread silently.
In Mongwalu, some deaths were attributed not to illness but to witchcraft. The belief became known locally as the “coffin phenomenon” – the idea that anyone who touched the coffin of a deceased person would also die.
International charity Save the Children said the Bundibugyo strain has not been seen in Ituri before. The limited testing available in the province was testing for the Zaïre strain and not returning positive results.
“By the time the Bundibugyo strain was detected, it had already spread quite far. We are in a game of catch-up,” its DR Congo representative Greg Ramm said in a statement.
Authorities warn that the virus’s spread into large urban centers presents serious challenges.
Despite Dr. Kamba’s visit to Bunia over the weekend, residents feel progress to curb the virus has been slow.
“If there’s no treatment centre here in the capital,” one resident asked, “then what about other areas?”
Bunia in Ituri, and Butembo and Goma in North Kivu, are home to hundreds of thousands of people, yet none has a fully operational Ebola treatment centre five days after the outbreak declaration.
Residents in Goma – eastern DR Congo’s largest city – tell the BBC that basic public health measures, such as avoiding handshakes, limiting gatherings, and regular handwashing, are widely ignored.
“I’m heading to the border to report on people stranded there,” said José Mutanava, a local journalist. “I’m wearing a face mask, but not many people are.”
Another resident, who asked not to be named, said: “Nobody can follow the barrier measures – maybe only when we see more deaths. Today in the city centre I saw only four people wearing masks.”
Others say daily survival takes priority.
“It’s too much to ask people struggling to eat to follow these rules,” one resident said.
Eastern DR Congo is badly affected by conflict, adding further difficulties in dealing with the virus.
Save the Children said the Ebola outbreak is a “new massive crisis on top of an already difficult situation.”
“It is in an area of conflict, an area of humanitarian crisis, with hundreds of thousands of people displaced, and healthcare systems are already severely compromised,” it added.
Currently, four affected areas are in Ituri province: Mongwalu, the epicenter; Bunia; Rwampara; and Nyakunde.
In North Kivu, Goma is controlled by the M23 rebel group, while the province’s second-largest city, Butembo, is also affected by militia activity.
The US has announced $13m (£9.7m) in emergency assistance for DR Congo and Uganda and says it is considering further funding through the UN’s pooled humanitarian fund, alongside travel restrictions linked to the outbreak.
An American national, Dr. Peter Stafford, is among the infected after testing positive while working at Nyakunde Hospital in Ituri.
The doctor, his wife, and another colleague had been treating patients when the outbreak started, according to Serge, the Christian missionary group they were working for.
According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), a US national was evacuated to Germany for treatment, adding that it is working to evacuate at least six other Americans who were exposed.
On Sunday, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the outbreak a public health emergency of international concern, after confirmed cases were reported on 15 May.
For now, Congolese authorities say they are relying on hard-learned experience and public health measures to confront what is now the country’s 17th Ebola outbreak.
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