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Ebola outbreak risks becoming 'deadliest on record,' IRC warns
ABC News ^ | May 26, 2026 | Morgan Winsor, Dada Jovanovic, and David Brennan

Posted on 05/26/2026 10:08:50 AM PDT by Red Badger

LONDON -- The New York-based International Rescue Committee (IRC) aid organization warned on Tuesday that the ongoing Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and neighboring Uganda is now spreading faster than responders can contain it and risks becoming "the deadliest on record" without urgent international action.

What is especially alarming, the IRC said, is that the outbreak is no longer limited to remote areas of the DRC's northeastern province of Ituri, the epicenter of the current epidemic.

Cases and contacts are now spreading into larger regional hubs, the IRC warned, including the major city of Goma in the DRC's eastern province of North Kivu and also Uganda's capital, Kampala, with fears of much wider transmission.

"The outbreak is spreading faster than the response, with over 900 suspected cases and at least 223 deaths already reported across DRC and Uganda, including in major transport hubs like Goma and Kampala," the IRC wrote.

The IRC said conflict, mass displacement and deep international aid cuts have left health systems far weaker than during the massive 2018-2020 Ebola outbreak in the eastern DRC, which the World Health Organization said killed at least 2,299 people.

The last time the IRC issued a warning of this scale about Ebola was during the 2018-2020 outbreak, when the organization repeatedly warned that violence, mistrust and weak health systems could allow the virus to spiral into a regional catastrophe.

The IRC is calling for an emergency international funding surge, the appointment of a United Nations emergency coordinator, faster import approvals for medical supplies and equipment, stronger community outreach to rebuild trust, special protection for women and girls – who reportedly make up around two-thirds of suspected cases – and long-term investment in fragile health systems already damaged by war and insecurity.

The current Ebola outbreak is caused by the Bundibugyo virus, a rare variant of Ebola for which there are no approved vaccines or therapeutics and which requires different diagnostics than other variants. Case fatality rates for previous Bundibugyo outbreaks have ranged from 30% to 50%, according to the WHO.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that the deadliest Ebola outbreak on record occurred between 2014 and 2016 in West Africa, with more than 28,600 cases reported. The WHO said that outbreak killed at least 11,325 people by June 2016.

WHO chief Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said during a Monday briefing that the current Ebola outbreak "will get worse before it gets better."

"We are facing an extremely serious and difficult outbreak. It will get worse before it gets better," Tedros said on Monday. "But we know this virus, and we know how to stop it. We have stopped every previous Ebola outbreak, and we will stop this one, too."

Ghebreyesus said he wanted to echo comments made by South African President Cyril Ramaphosa about overcoming the outbreak with unity.

"The question is just how quickly we can do it, and how many more lives will be lost before we do," Ghebreyesus added.

Last week, Tedros classified the Ebola outbreak as a public health emergency of international concern – one level below a pandemic in the United Nations agency's alert system.

The WHO continues to consider the national risk assessment as "very high" while the regional level risk remains "high" and the global risk level remains "low," Ghebreyesus said on Monday.

The outbreak has led to multiple countries, including the U.S., India, the U.K. and Australia, putting travel restrictions in place.

Entry to the U.S. is restricted for foreign travelers who have recently been in the DRC, Uganda and South Sudan.

Meanwhile, U.S. passport holders and U.S. nationals returning to the U.S. from the three countries will be funneled to Dulles Airport in Virginia to be screened for symptoms and interviewed about possible exposure.

Enhanced screening efforts also began at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport as of Saturday morning. Efforts at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston will begin late Tuesday.

Lawful permanent residents – green card holders – who have been in any of the three countries in question over the last 21 days are temporarily barred from entering the U.S.

ABC News' Eric M. Strauss and Mary Kekatos contributed to this report.


TOPICS: Health/Medicine; History; Military/Veterans; Society
KEYWORDS: congo; drc; ebola; irc
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To: Red Badger

The epidemic this time is actually spread by a bat and not a commie Fauci . The virus goes from the bats into other wildlife which is then eaten by people .


41 posted on 05/26/2026 1:42:00 PM PDT by Nateman (Democrats did not strive for fraud friendly voting merely to continue honest elections.)
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To: dfwgator

Prob’ly not ... you know how she is ...


42 posted on 05/26/2026 3:10:54 PM PDT by SkyDancer ( ~ Am Yisrael Chai ~)
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To: bdfromlv

Yeah, none of that Nigerian get-rich-quick crap for me! I’m still waiting for my payoff from the last five I sent money to! 🤪


43 posted on 05/26/2026 3:22:43 PM PDT by Nervous Tick (Hope, as a righteous product of properly aligned Faith, IS in fact a strategy.)
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To: GenXPolymath

If that doomsday scenario is true, why aren’t we all dead already from the last eleventy dozen outbreaks?

And might the “record numbers” coincide with the high population growth rate in sub-Saharan africa? How does this breakout look compared to the last ten, normalized for population growth?

I’m not buying the fear porn, but thanks for living up to your screen name.


44 posted on 05/26/2026 3:33:11 PM PDT by Nervous Tick (Hope, as a righteous product of properly aligned Faith, IS in fact a strategy.)
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To: Gay State Conservative

>> I’m amazed that anyone there lives past the age of 10 with all the breathtaking filth you see.

Maybe by the time they’re 5 — if they live that long — they have an immune system that’ll stop a Mack truck??


45 posted on 05/26/2026 3:37:52 PM PDT by Nervous Tick (Hope, as a righteous product of properly aligned Faith, IS in fact a strategy.)
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To: GenXPolymath

Global jet travel, the best disease vector that the world has ever known.


46 posted on 05/26/2026 4:34:39 PM PDT by Pelham (President Eisenhower. Operation Wetback 1953-54)
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To: Red Badger

International Rescue...

Thunderbirds Are GO!


47 posted on 05/26/2026 4:39:02 PM PDT by Fledermaus ("It turns out all we really needed was a new President!")
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To: Red Badger

This is nothing new so don’t get all hysterical over it.
I read of ebola in the 1990s and there was a move VIRUS(1995) about it being released in the USA.

https://www.themoviedb.org/movie/77169-virus


48 posted on 05/26/2026 4:40:44 PM PDT by Ruy Dias de Bivar (REOPEN THE MENTAL HOSPITALS CLOSED IN THE 1970s!)
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To: Ruy Dias de Bivar

The Bundibugyo strain is pretty new, it wasn’t known until 2007. Only a 40% mortality rate.

Ebola in general wasn’t known until 1976. There’s four types that infect humans. Africans need to quit messing with bats.


49 posted on 05/26/2026 5:00:46 PM PDT by Pelham (President Eisenhower. Operation Wetback 1953-54)
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To: GenXPolymath
Simple truth is if this gets a foothold in Lagos or Paris or Istanbul it can and will go global

There was an outbreak in Lagos, perhaps about 10 years ago, and even Nigeria managed to contain it. So no, it won't go global, and it isn't nearly as contagious as you claim that it is. The R parameter (average number of people infected before the virus clears or the patient dies) for Ebola is less than 2, vs. about 10 for measles, influenz, and coronaviruses. You don't catch Ebola from being in the same room or on the same plane as someone with the disease.

Posts like yours just contribute to hysteria and fearmongering. Perhaps you want another Covid-style lockdown because of this, only this time as strict as China's?

50 posted on 05/27/2026 7:02:17 AM PDT by ek_hornbeck
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