Confirmed Ebola cases in Congo outbreak top 1,000 with 254 deaths,
authorities say
[June 22, 2026]
By JUSTIN KABUMBA and CONSTANT SAME BAGALWA
BUNIA, Congo (AP) — Confirmed cases in the Ebola outbreak in eastern
Congo have reached 1,003, including 254 deaths, officials said, as
tracing those who had been in contact with patients remains a major
challenge.
A total of 100 people have recovered in the outbreak concentrated in the
Ituri province since it was declared on May 15, Congo’s Ministry of
Health said Sunday. At least 365 patients are in hospitals or in
isolation, it said.
The Ebola outbreak caused by the rare Bundibugyo virus, which has no
vaccines or treatment, was the worst ever in its first month. Officials
admit there could be far more cases they still don’t know about and that
the peak of the outbreak is still ahead.
Contact tracing remains a key issue for local authorities, who have only
achieved a 55% coverage rate, the ministry said.
“If you want to control an outbreak, especially Ebola outbreak, you must
know the index case. We don’t have confidence on when this outbreak
started,” the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Director-General Dr. Jean Kaseya told The Associated Press last week.
Officials also are yet to identify the patient zero and trace more than
35,000 people who have come in contact with infected individuals as of
last week, authorities said.
That’s partly because eastern Congo is also battling ongoing violence
from rebels. In Ituri, attacks by the Islamic State group-backed Allied
Democratic Force have cut off access to many villages and forced people
to flee their homes, including those sheltering in overcrowded camps and
others constantly on the move.
More than a month into the outbreak, officials believe the disease
continues to outpace response efforts and no one knows its true scale.

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Relatives of Vanisa Anifa, a 6-month-old orphaned girl who died of
Ebola, attend her burial, in Bunia, Congo, Friday, June 19, 2026.
(AP Photo/Moses Sawasawa)
 Displaced persons at risk as
unexplained deaths reported in a camp
At the Kigonze displacement camp in Bunia, the capital of Ituri
province, camp officials said Friday that 10 people had died last
week in unusual circumstances, raising the fear of a possible
outbreak in the camp of over 20,000 displaced people.
There had been no Ebola case confirmed at the site, camp officials
said, but added that the death rate was unprecedented and called for
investigation.
The U.N. refugee agency has said at least 2 million people forcibly
displaced from their homes, including over 320,000 refugees, live in
areas at risk of Ebola in Congo.
In a statement on Friday, the agency said it was “deeply concerned
by the accelerating spread” of the virus and “the growing risks it
poses to displaced communities across the region.”
“If a disease or epidemic were to spread among the thousands of
people living at this (Kigonze) site, it would be a real catastrophe
given our already very precarious living conditions,” said Charité
Banza, a civil society leader in Ituri.
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