WHO and Africa CDC launch a massive $518 million emergency response plan to contain the rapid outbreak.
KINSHASA: The ongoing Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has taken an alarming turn, with confirmed infections jumping to 710. Health authorities announced on Saturday that the virus has already claimed at least 139 lives, sparking urgent regional and global health concerns.
According to the official statement released by the DRC Ministry of Health on Saturday evening, medical teams on the ground are battling a swift rise in numbers. The death toll, which currently stands at 139, reflects the high fatality rate characteristic of the disease when containment measures face logistical bottlenecks.
In response to the escalating crisis, international health agencies have mobilized a major financial and medical intervention. The World Health Organization (WHO) and the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) have jointly initiated an emergency response plan.
The strategy is backed by a $518 million budget aimed at aggressively containing the virus over the next six months. This collaborative initiative will focus on heavy deployment of medical supplies, scaling up contact tracing, accelerating vaccination drives in high-risk zones, and strengthening community-level awareness.
The Democratic Republic of Congo is historically vulnerable to Ebola outbreaks, but the speed of the current transmission has put severe strain on local health infrastructures. Global health experts emphasize that early detection and rapid cross-border monitoring are critical to ensuring the virus does not spill into neighboring African nations.
With the $518 million emergency plan now active, the upcoming weeks will be crucial for international health teams attempting to flatten the infection curve and stabilize the region.











































