The outbreak itself was first detected in early May in the Mongbwalu health zone of Ituri Province. The Institut National de Recherche Biomédicale (INRB) in Kinshasa confirmed Bundibugyo virus in eight samples on May 15, the same day the DRC and Uganda jointly declared the outbreak . This is the 17th recorded Ebola outbreak in the DRC since the virus was first identified in 1976
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The suspected-case counts dwarf the confirmed numbers because testing capacity is severely limited. In the DRC, only 125 of the 1,031 total cases in the combined count had received laboratory confirmation as of May 29 . Health agencies expect the true burden of infection to be substantially higher than official figures suggest
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Bundibugyo virus (BDBV) is a rarer and less-studied member of the Ebola virus family, distinct from the Zaire ebolavirus strain that drove most prior DRC outbreaks . While Zaire ebolavirus has a WHO-approved vaccine (Ervebo) and licensed monoclonal antibody therapeutics, no WHO-approved vaccine or specific antiviral treatment exists for Bundibugyo virus disease
. The DRC’s health minister, Roger Kamba, warned early on that “the Bundibugyo strain has no vaccine, no specific treatment” and that it carries “a very high lethality rate which can reach 50%”
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Without pharmaceutical countermeasures, responders must rely entirely on classical outbreak control: rapid case identification, isolation, contact tracing, safe burials, and community engagement. The first recovery demonstrates that survival is possible with early supportive care—but delivering that care in this environment is extraordinarily difficult.
On May 17, 2026, WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus declared the outbreak a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) . This was the first time in WHO history that a Director-General triggered the IHR Article 12 provision to declare a PHEIC before convening the formal Emergency Committee, a step Dr. Tedros said he took due to the urgency of the situation and after consulting the health ministers of the affected countries
. The Africa CDC followed by declaring a Public Health Emergency of Continental Security on May 18
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Dr. Tedros arrived in Kinshasa on May 28 for an official visit to support the national response . Speaking at the airport, he described the outbreak as “very complex” and appealed directly to armed groups in eastern DRC to declare a ceasefire so health workers could reach affected communities
. He also urged greater international funding and warned that “countries bordering DRC are at especially high risk”
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Simultaneously, DRC Health Minister Roger Kamba pushed back against media narratives that the outbreak was spiraling out of control. Speaking in Bunia on May 29, he said, “I’ve heard in the press that the epidemic is ‘out of control’… that is not the case,” while conceding the outbreak was still in its early stages and might require months to contain . Kamba estimated the containment timeline at up to six months and noted that roughly 3,600 contacts were under monitoring
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The eastern DRC’s chronic instability has directly sabotaged the outbreak response. WHO officials reported in late May that contact tracing was “failing” because insecurity and population displacement prevented responders from reaching most suspected contacts . Active armed groups in Ituri and North Kivu provinces have made whole health zones inaccessible. Displacement also creates crowded, unsanitary conditions that accelerate transmission
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Compounding the problem, the vast majority of reported cases remain in the “suspected” category. Many deaths occur in remote areas before samples can be collected and sent to laboratories, meaning the official death toll of 17 confirmed and 223 suspected fatalities represents only a fraction of the likely true impact . Community mistrust, food shortages, and difficult terrain add further layers of difficulty
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The figures cited here carry built-in uncertainty. Multiple health agencies—the WHO, the European CDC, the US CDC, and the Africa CDC—all rely on DRC Ministry of Health reports, but the numbers evolve quickly and occasionally contain data revisions. For example, on May 28 the DRC authorities revised their suspected case count downward after reclassifying some cases as confirmed and removing non-cases . Readers should consult the latest official situation reports from the WHO and national health ministries for the most current numbers. As of the end of May 2026, this outbreak remains active, fast-moving, and deeply embedded in one of the world’s most difficult humanitarian contexts.
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