Ebola is infecting and killing people in a gold mining area of eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, and the โcomplex and dangerousโ outbreak still constitutes an international emergency, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Friday.
The virus has infected 3,227 people and killed 2,154 of them since the outbreak was declared in August 2018 and went on to became the worldโs second worst outbreak, it said.
The WHOโs Emergency Committee on Ebola reviewed the situation since declaring the outbreak an international emergency on July 17. In a statement on Friday, it said the epidemic is โcurrently concentrated in the Mandima health zone in the Biakato mine health areaโ.
โThis outbreak remains a complex and dangerous outbreak,โ WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a news conference, adding that he had accepted the independent panelโs recommendation to maintain the emergency status.
โBut one thing would like to underline, even if this Ebola ends it may come back, because there is instability in eastern DRC and political instability and lack of security. These are pre-conditions,โ he said.
Fifteen new confirmed cases were reported in North Kivu and Ituri provinces in the week to Oct. 13, the WHO said in its latest update. This compared with nearly 130 cases per week at the peak in April.
But insecurity and access issues in parts of Mandima, including the Biakato mines, hamper finding infected people and tracing their contacts, as well as ensuring safe burials, it said.
Thirty-one of the 50 Ebola cases reported in the last three weeks were from or linked to Biakato, WHO figures show.
โI do believe there will be further cases to be found in the Biakato mines area,โ said Dr. Michael Ryan, executive director of WHOโs Health Emergencies Programme.
โThe area is that remote and the communities are that deep in the countryside, that it will be another week to two weeks before we can be sure that there is not undetected transmission
in that zone,โ he added.
In Mambasa and most of Mandima, experts have a good handle on the virusโ evolution, Ryan said.
โBut in the areas of Lwemba and Biakato mine we still donโt have a full picture as to where the virus may be.
โSo we donโt believe we are dealing with a catastrophic situation, the numbers are extremely low compared to before, but we donโt fully understand the dynamics of transmission in the Biakoto mine area,โ he said.
REUTERS