New Delhi: A fresh Ebola outbreak has been confirmed in Congo’s remote Ituri province, adding another public health alarm after recent norovirus and hantavirus
outbreaks linked to cruise travel. Africa CDC, the continent’s top health body, said 246 suspected Ebola cases and 65 deaths have been recorded so far in the province.
The timing is worrying. In recent days, norovirus cases were confirmed aboard Ambassador Cruise Line’s Ambition after passengers reported stomach illness, and WHO said a hantavirus outbreak linked to MV Hondius has killed three people this year. Now, Ebola has returned in Congo, a country that has faced repeated outbreaks since the virus first appeared there in 1976.
Ebola outbreak confirmed in Ituri province
Africa CDC said the deaths and suspected cases are mainly from the Mongwalu and Rwampara health zones. The agency said, “Four deaths have been reported among laboratory-confirmed cases. Suspected cases have also been reported in Bunia, pending confirmation.”
Reuters reported that preliminary laboratory data points to a non-Zaire strain of the virus, with genetic sequencing still underway. Africa CDC is also calling an emergency regional coordination meeting with Congo, Uganda, South Sudan and international partners to step up surveillance and response work.
Why Ebola raises serious concern
Ebola is rare, but it can be severe and often fatal. It spreads through contact with infected bodily fluids such as blood, vomit or semen. That is why quick tracing, isolation and safe care become very important during an outbreak.
| Outbreak | Key detail from current reports |
|---|---|
| Ebola | 246 suspected cases and 65 deaths in Ituri, Congo |
| Norovirus | Outbreak confirmed on cruise ship Ambition after stomach illness reports |
| Hantavirus | WHO said 11 cases and three deaths linked to MV Hondius outbreak |
Congo faces a hard response challenge
Ituri is more than 1,000 kilometers from Kinshasa and has poor road networks. That makes moving medical teams, supplies and vaccines harder. The region is also dealing with armed violence, including activity linked to the M23 rebel group and the Islamic State-linked Allied Democratic Force.
Congo’s last Ebola outbreak was declared over around five months ago after 43 deaths. This new outbreak is the country’s 17th since 1976. For public health teams, the task now is clear and urgent: confirm cases, trace contacts, protect health workers and stop the virus before it travels further.














