Residents in eastern Congo cling to hope as a new Ebola treatment trial
begins
[July 06, 2026]
By PROSPER HERI NGORORA and MARK BANCHEREAU
BUNIA, Congo (AP) — Residents at the epicenter of Congo’s Ebola outbreak
are pinning their hopes on experimental treatments after researchers
began a highly anticipated study in early July of two possible Ebola
treatments in hopes of fighting the still-growing outbreak.
At the Ebola treatment center inside Bunia's Evangelical Medical Center,
in eastern Congo's Ituri province, the launch of the research was marked
by urgency rather than ceremony on Thursday.
As ambulances continued arriving and healthcare workers disappeared
behind layers of protective equipment into isolation wards, the research
effort unfolded quietly alongside the daily struggle to keep patients
alive.
The virus causing this outbreak, called Bundibugyo, is less common than
others that cause Ebola disease and there are no specific treatments or
vaccines for it. Already more than 1,400 people have been diagnosed and
438 have died, the head of the World Health Organization, Tedros Adhanom
Ghebreyesus, said Thursday.
The WHO announced the same day that the first participant had been
enrolled in the study, which is evaluating whether the antiviral
remdesivir, the experimental antibody treatment MBP134, or a combination
of both can improve survival among patients infected with the Bundibugyo
virus.
Survival will be tracked for 28 days after starting treatment, according
to WHO research adviser Dr. Vasee Moorthy.

The WHO-supported trial is a collaboration between Congo’s national
biomedical research institute INRB, Britain’s Oxford University,
Antwerp’s Institute of Tropical Medicine and other international health
groups.
The current trial focuses on confirmed Ebola patients receiving
treatment inside specialized treatment centers, said professor Yap Boum,
head of emergency response at the Africa Centres for Disease Control and
Prevention. A second phase of the trial will include healthcare workers,
close contacts and others at high risk of infection, he added.
Professor Placide Mbala, coordinator of laboratory activities for the
current outbreak, said the research could continue for between three and
six months, depending on how quickly the outbreak evolves.
Trial offers hope in area where virus has spread
For many residents of Bunia, the beginning of the trial offers a rare
source of encouragement after weeks of mounting fear.
Audrey Tengetenge, a Bunia resident, said the trials represent a “light
at the end of the tunnel."

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Health workers interact at the Evangelical Medical Center, in Bunia,
eastern Congo, Friday, July 3, 2026, where Ebola clinical trials are
scheduled to take place. (AP Photo/Dirole Lotsima Dieudonne)
 “I hope everything moves very
quickly so that we can find relief. We want nothing more than an end
to this very dangerous disease, which continues to bring us grief,”
Tengetenge added.
Gladys Munguro, who survived Ebola and was discharged from an Ebola
treatment center two weeks ago, said she watched fellow patients die
while she was receiving care.
Now recovered, Munguro said she hopes the new treatments being
tested will improve patients’ chances of survival and help bring the
outbreak under control.
“This experimental phase is necessary for us,” Munguro told The
Associated Press. “I will volunteer as soon as the next phase of the
trials begins for high-risk individuals."
But researchers will have to overcome pockets of deep mistrust in
the community.
Nelson Dhebi, a shopkeeper in Bunia, said that while he supports
scientific research and hopes for a positive outcome, he is
concerned that the treatments could cause deaths and thinks that
others should be part of the trials. “Research should be carried out
first and foremost on our elected representatives, as they are the
ones who represent us,” he said.
Challenges hamper the response
Community mistrust is just one of the many challenges that have
hindered the response to the outbreak. Overcrowded treatment centers
in hard-hit areas, delays in people seeking care and insecurity
restricting access to conflict-affected areas remain major
obstacles.
Nearly three out of four Ebola deaths during this outbreak occur
outside of health centers, Pierre Akilimali, incident manager at
Congo’s National Institute of Public Health said Friday.
Currently, the study is being offered only at Bunia’s Evangelical
Medical Centre in Ituri. The region has been hit hard by violence,
including toward healthcare workers trying to fight the virus, which
spreads by contact with sick patients’ bodily fluids.
Officials plan to expand the trials to other locations once it is
safe to do so.
___
Banchereau reported from Dakar, Senegal. Constant Same Bagalwa in
Bunia contributed to this report.
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