Tag: DR Congo

  • DR Congo announces end of latest Ebola epidemic

    The Democratic Republic of Congo on Wednesday declared the end of the country’s latest Ebola epidemic after the outbreak killed 55 people over the past five months.

    “I am happy to solemnly declare the end of the 11th epidemic of the Ebola virus in Equateur province” in the vast country’s northwest, Health Minister Eteni Longondo told journalists.

    The World Health Organization said the latest outbreak had killed 55 people among 119 confirmed and 11 probable cases since it began in June.

    The outbreak was “the longest, most complex and deadliest” in the 60-year history of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Health Minister Eteni Longondo said.

    It has only been surpassed by the 2013-16 Ebola epidemic in West Africa that killed 11,300 people.

    Source: africanews.com

  • Uganda, DR Congo decide to make roads, not war

    If the road to hell is paved with good intentions, that to lasting peace with neighbours is layered with bitumen and straddled by high-voltage electricity lines.

    That appears to be the lesson from the Uganda government’s strategic shift in its regional policy towards the Democratic Republic of Congo, its large, rich, but a troubled westerly neighbour.

    After two-and-a-half decades of testy relations, including an armed invasion in 1997 that contributed to one of the world’s deadliest conflicts since World War II, Uganda is betting that infrastructure investments and shared economic benefits will build better relations and long-term stability.

    Uganda’s cabinet recently approved plans to build three roads inside the DRC, continuing the country’s recent strategy of growing its influence in the Great Lakes region riding on infrastructure diplomacy.

    Jointly funded by the two countries, the roads will run from some of Uganda’s border towns into DRC: one will run from Kasindi to Beni (80km) and another will integrate the Beni-Butebo axis (54km). The third will stretch for 89 kilometres from the border town of Bunagana, through Rutshuru to the strategic city of Goma, the capital of the North Kivu Province in DRC.

    Uganda’s Works and Transport Minister, Gen Edward Katumba Wamala told The EastAfrican that while details remain unclear, the project has been approved in principle. “What has been approved by the Cabinet is the concept,” he said. “Both governments will contribute to the funding with DRC taking the biggest part and Uganda will make a contribution,” he said.

    He added that Kinshasa will have to approve the projects and sign a memorandum of understanding.

    The Cabinet approval followed the Uganda-DRC Business Forum in November 2019 in Kampala, which included a bilateral meeting between Presidents Felix Tshisekedi and Yoweri Museveni at State House, Entebbe.

    The two presidents, together with Presidents Paul Kagame of Rwanda and João Lourenço of Angola, also participated in a teleconference on October 7 which discussed regional security and collaboration.

    Last week Uganda’s Finance Minister Matia Kasaija presented a supplementary budget request to Parliament for the construction of the roads. From the request, Uganda is expected to contribute $65.9 million out of the total bill of $334.3m but officials say it is a small investment for a project with economic, political and strategic importance.

    Cross-border trade

    Economically, the road will double trade volumes between the two countries in the short term, according to Gen Wamala, the Transport minister. In 2018, Uganda exported goods to DR Congo worth $532 million, including an estimated $312 million in informal exports.

    Uganda’s top exports to DRC include cement, sugar, rice, beer, wheat flour, biscuits and beauty and make-up products while importing include iron, pearls, mineral fuels, wood, charcoal, spices, vegetable fats and oils, rubber among others from its western neighbour.

    Trade across the border has however been hampered by a poor road network inside DRC which Ugandan traders say increases the cost of doing business. Insecurity in the region has also been a hindrance to smooth cross border trade between the two countries. The road is thus expected to speed up trade and increase transparency in the cross-border flows of goods.

    Politically, Uganda is banking on infrastructure to strengthen relations which thawed somewhat under former president Joseph Kabila but remained frosty due to instability in eastern DRC and a $10 billion bill imposed on Kampala in 2005 by the International Court of Justice.

    The ongoing rapprochement has been helped by a new outward-looking regional policy from Kinshasa under President Tshisekedi. Since taking office last January, the new Congolese leader has visited all nine countries with contiguous borders in a clear change of approach from his more introverted predecessor.

    Five of those neighbouring countries are in the East African Community and last year President Tshisekedi wrote to the seeking to have his country admitted to the regional bloc, a decision that is under review. The new leader has openly spoken of Congo’s new foreign policy objectives.

    “We are committed to change,” President Tshisekedi said recently.

    “We are discussing economic integration, peace between our peoples and at our borders,” he added.

    Marching east

    DRC’s pivot from a primarily francophone central African locus to the mainly anglophone eastern Africa has not gone unnoticed by state and non-state actors in Kampala or in other capitals in the region. In August, the Nairobi Securities Exchange-listed Equity Group Holdings Plc completed the acquisition of a majority stake in Congolese lender Banque Commerciale Du Congo.

    The pivot east started during the Kabila administration when, in 2007, DRC and Uganda agreed to pursue joint oil and gas exploration activities near their common border, before similar agreements with Tanzania in 2016 and Rwanda in 2017. The tentative steps have turned into a goose march east under President Tshisekedi.

    In March 2019 Rwanda and DRC signed an air transport agreement opening up their respective airspaces to Congo Airways and Rwandair, allowing the latter to launch flights to and open an office in Kinshasa.

    Earlier this month, after a special envoy from Kinshasa visited Bujumbura, the DRC and Burundi agreed to “regulate and increase cross-border trade in the best interest of the economies of the two countries” and to jointly fight against “negative forces and other armed groups destabilising our two countries, in particular by organising coordinated patrols on both sides of the common borders,” according to a communique issued after the visit.

    However, coming 18 months after Rwanda closed its border with Uganda and with it a major trade artery into the heart of the continent, DRC’s overtures present a strategic work-around for Uganda’s geo-political planners. The road to Goma, in particular, while longer that the existing route through Rwanda, would provide an alternative ingress into the lucrative Congo market.

    With its population of 84 million, the DRC is already one of Uganda’s biggest trading partners in the region and Kampala is keen to build even stronger ties to replace other shrunken regional export markets, including South Sudan which remains politically and economically volatile.

    Apart from the road projects, Uganda is dusting off plans from 2013 to build a 396-kilometre high voltage electricity transmission line from Nkenda sub-station in Kasese near the border, to Beni, Butembo and Bunia towns all in DRC.

    Hotspot

    Uganda’s infrastructure diplomacy in Congo is not new. The country has built or contributed to building roads in Kenya and in South Sudan, schools in Tanzania and Rwanda, and has made the crude-oil export pipeline through Tanzania a major tool of cooperation with Dar es Salaam. Plans to build a standard gauge railway to extend a similar line from Naivasha in Kenya to Uganda and the border with Rwanda have since stalled on weak underlying economic fundamentals.

    The east of DRC, which borders Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi, has long been a hotspot for insecurity with various militia including the Allied Democratic Forces, the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), and Movement 23. It is also a perennial source of refugees, with the UNHCR reporting that more than 3,000 have crossed from Congo to Uganda since July, raising to 360,000 the number of Congolese who have sought sanctuary in the neighbouring country.

    After years of unsuccessfully waging war to bring peace to the region, the two governments are hoping that trade and good roads can finally deliver the goods.

    Source: theeastafrican.co.ke

  • Armed attackers free more than 1,300 prisoners in DR Congo

    Suspected Allied Democratic Forces (ADF) rebels freed more than 1,300 prisoners in an assault on a jail in Beni, eastern Democratic Republic Congo.

    Only about 100 prisoners after the attack on Kagbayi prison on Tuesday morning.

    The ADF are a Ugandan rebel group with bases in eastern Congo.

    “We had a count before the escape of 1,456 (prisoners), 110 (of them) stayed and I thank them for that. Some 20 (escapees) have already returned and I know that others are on their way back. We’ll do a tally, and work out how many have come back”, said Modeste Bakwanamaha, the mayor of Beni.

    Kagbayi prison is used to hold errant army soldiers and militiamen captured in fighting, including some from the ADF.

    Jail breaks are common in Congo where conditions in detention facilities are said to be very bad.

    Source: africanews.com

  • DR Congo militia rape students on eve of exams

    Armed militia attacked a school and raped female students on the eve of their examinations in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    The men attacked an examination centre housing 35 final year students in Isiro town, the capital of Haut-Uélé province.

    The students went on to sit for the examinations on Monday, according to a priest in the area.

    Hundreds of students fled after an attack near another examination centre, according to AFP news agency.

    Some 700 students and teachers fled after the attack near the border with South Sudan.

    The militia wanted to sabotage exams, the agency quotes a local army spokesperson Dieudonne Kasereka as saying.

    Source: bbc.com

  • UN: DR Congo should investigate death threats against Nobel winner

    The UN’s rights chief has asked the Democratic Republic of Congo to investigate death threats against Nobel Peace laureate Denis Mukwege.

    Dr Mukwege said that he received death threats after commenting about the killing of 18 people in South Kivu province last month.

    Dr Mukwege is a gynaecologist and has a clinic in that area.

    He shared the Nobel Peace Prize in 2018 for his work on sexual violence in war.

    The UN rights chief Michelle Bachelet called for an impartial probe into the threats.

    President Felix Tshisekedi pledged last week that the government would investigate the threats and ensure Dr Mukwege’s security.

    Source: bbc.com

  • DR Congo declares end to world’s biggest measles outbreak

    The authorities in the Democratic Republic of Congo say the world’s largest measles outbreak that killed more than 7,000 children has now ended.

    Efforts to stop its spread were hampered by an under-resourced health system as well as conflict.

    Health experts say the actual number of deaths from measles could be far higher as many cases go unreported.

    At a press conference in the capital, Kinshasa, Health Minister, Eteni Longondo, said measles no longer existed in the country.

    He said a formal declaration about the end of the epidemic “will be made soon”.

    Whilst international health partners are yet to confirm this, the announcement comes after a huge vaccination campaign that reached at least 18 million children last year.

    The Democratic Republic of Congo has been experiencing recurring outbreaks for the last decade but the infections increased significantly in June last year and quickly overwhelmed the country’s under resourced health system.

    Health workers have over the last year simultaneously battled measles, vaccine-derived polio, cholera, coronavirus, two Ebola epidemics and the bubonic plague.

    The daunting task made even harder by the country’s poor infrastructure and numerous conflicts.

    Source: bbc.com

  • DR Congo’s Kabila prowls the political sidelines

    Officially, he stepped down in January 2019, retiring after 18 years at the helm of the biggest country in sub-Saharan Africa.

    But nearly 18 months on, former president Joseph Kabila remains a powerful figure, wielding influence in the murky politics of the Democratic Republic of Congo through a network of followers and a forced coalition with his successor.

    “Kabila, come back quickly so we can restore order,” his supporters chanted on Thursday as they marched in Kinshasa, where the coalition with backers of President Felix Tshisekedi is in trouble and heads are rolling.

    Prime Minister Sylvestre Ilunga has publicly denounced a decision by Tshisekedi to replace two pillars of the former Kabila regime: the army’s inspector general and the president of the Constitutional Court.

    Kabila handed the presidency to Tshisekedi after elections in December 2018, in the first peaceful transfer of power since independence from Belgium nearly 60 years earlier.

    Still only 49 despite his years at the top, Kabila lives on a farm at Kingakati, 80 kilometres (50 miles) from the capital, surrounded by wildlife ranging from lions to antelopes.

    In a zoo open to the public, Kabila takes selfies with visitors he sometimes bumps into on Sundays.

    The man who once ruled the sprawling DRC during a brutal regional war now goes out with just “two or three bodyguards”, according to an aide.

    Low-key by nature, Kabila has made no political utterances and has avoided public appearances, even when meeting with Tshisekedi to try to ease the tensions in their uneasy cohabitation.

    No information was released about their last meeting at the beginning of July.

    But he remains the driving force in his Common Front for Congo (FCC) political group — a veritable war machine that he set up before leaving office.

    In the same elections that brought Tshisekedi to power, the FCC won a commanding majority in parliament, forcing Tshisekedi’s supporters into the role of junior partners in what has become a deeply troubled coalition.

    Kabila placed the FCC leadership in the hands of his former chief of staff, Nehemie Mwilanya, who hails as he does from the Swahili-speaking east of the country.

    Mwilanya acknowledges that “the chief” receives FCC officials on his ranch. “There are courtesy visits and there are visits to seek advice,” he said.

    “He manages his political family on a day-to-day basis,” a former presidential adviser told AFP.

    ‘Balance of power’

    The former head of state has never ruled out a return to the political stage.

    “In life as in politics, I exclude nothing,” he told the foreign press in December 2018, just before his retirement.

    Kabila left office two years after his second and last constitutional term expired. He was under pressure from foreign partners of the DR Congo, including the United States and the European Union, as well as demonstrators.

    Kabila’s many foes, who have faced brutal repression, feared he would seize a third mandate by force, but elections took place after three postponements.

    Earlier this month, three street protests were called by a spectrum of political and social forces including Tshisekedi’s Union for Democracy and Social Progress (UDPS).

    One of their grievances was the choice of a new election chief who has been accused of rigging elections in favour of Kabila.

    Thursday’s heated protest was launched after Tshisekedi sacked two strongmen of the former regime.

    Kabila supporters see their role as containing Tshisekedi’s influence in the name of “a balance of power”.

    Some argue that nothing stops him coming back. The next elections are due in 2023.

    “The constitution bans three consecutive terms, but it says nothing about a possible return after a gap of five years,” a former adviser said.

    Kabila’s right-hand man Mwilanya, a lawyer, is firmer still: “The constitutional rules are clear. They impose no restrictions on him per se.”

    Source: AFP NEW AGENCY

  • DRCs Tshisekedi lifts state of emergency as coronavirus death rate falls

    President Félix Tshisekedi has lifted the state of emergency in the Democratic Republic of Congo in a phased reopening of the country following a slowdown of coronavirus infections spread and fatalities.

    The countrywide state of emergency was declared on March 24 as well as the shutting down of national borders.

    Commercial activities, including the reopening of banks, restaurants and bars, as well as social gatherings and public transport resume on Wednesday, the President announced.

    “The death rate has dropped from 11 percent to 2.4 percent. The mortality rate is on a decline this month of July,” President Tshisekedi noted, lauding the efforts of the COVID-19 response team.

    The DRC has recorded a total of 8,534 confirmed coronavirus cases, with 196 deaths and 4,528 recoveries.

    Schools have been allowed to reopen from August 3, beginning with learners in the final year of studies in primary, secondary, colleges and universities.

    Reopening of places of worship, stadiums, performance halls including discotheques is scheduled for August 15.

    Inter-provincial and international travel restrictions will end on August 15 with the reopening of ports of entry.

    Only 14 out of 26 provinces have reported cases.

    Burial ceremonies, however, remain forbidden.

    The DRC will relearn how to carry on with normal life “while respecting the containment measures,” the Head of State said urging citizens to observe social distancing, washing and sanitizing of hands, compulsory wearing of masks in public places and regular disinfecting of places of activity.

  • DR Congo authorities ‘anticipate surge in child labour’

    The authorities in Democratic Republic of Congo’s south-eastern main mining area, Lualaba, are increasing monitoring in the fear that there will be a surge in parents sending their children down the mines, reports Reuters News agency.

    The global demand for metals such as cobalt has decreased during the coronavirus, leading to miners’ earnings plummeting, reports Reuters.

    It adds that exports of cobalt fell by 15.2% in the first quarter of 2020 compared to the same period last year.

    The fear is that if parents cannot earn enough money to survive they will take their children out of school to do dangerous work in mines.

    “Economic activity has been paralysed during this health crisis and this will have a negative impact on parents’ income… But this must not be used as justification for the presence of children in mines,” Mathieu Kazembe Sawana Ilunga, the official who oversees the economy in Lualaba, is quoted by Reuters as saying.

    Nathalie Lunda Ngandu, the official in charge of social affairs, gender and family issues in Lualaba, told Reuters that they will improve monitoring systems for child labour.

    Source: bbc.com

  • US and China ‘supplying undeclared weapons’ to DR Congo

    A United Nations report obtained by the French news agency outlines undeclared military aid to the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    The confidential report supplied to the UN Security Council says a large number of countries supplying weapons and training to the Congolese military have failed to notify the UN as required by a 2004 resolution.

    These include the United States, China and South Africa among others.

    The UN experts are monitoring sanctions against the country that expire at the end of June.

    Source: bbc.com

  • New Ebola outbreak hits DR Congo

    New cases of Ebola have been confirmed in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    Health Minister Eteni Longondo said four people had died from the virus in the western city of Mbandaka.

    It is more than 1,000km (about 600 miles) from the centre of the current outbreak in the east of the country.

    DR Congo was poised to declare an end to the second largest Ebola epidemic on record in April, but a new chain of infections was found.

    More than 2,000 people have died from the disease since August 2018.

    The country is also struggling with coronavirus, with more than 3,000 confirmed cases.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Leonardo DiCaprio joins DR Congo gorilla park campaign after attack

    Leonardo DiCaprio has joined a campaign to support Africa’s oldest nature reserve after it came under a deadly attack last month.

    Virunga National Park in the Democratic Republic of Congo is a popular tourist attraction and is known for its endangered mountain gorilla population.

    In April, 12 rangers at the park were killed in an ambush by a suspected Rwandan rebel group.

    DiCaprio has now contributed to a new fund which aims to support the park.

    Earth Alliance, a group co-founded by the actor, has donated part of the initial $2m (£1.65m) funding, although it is not clear exactly how much.

    “I had the great honour of meeting and supporting Virunga’s courageous team in their fight against illegal oil drilling in 2013,” DiCaprio said in a statement to BBC News.

    The actor was an executive producer on the documentary Virunga, which was nominated for an Oscar in 2014.

    “Virunga urgently needs funds to protect the endangered mountain gorilla population, to provide support to the rangers and the families of rangers who have fallen in the line of duty, and to help deliver essential disease prevention efforts,” he said.

    “It’s critical that we rally together during this time of incredible crisis.”

    The park, a Unesco World Heritage site, is one of the most biologically diverse in the world, and his home to several hundred species of birds, reptiles and mammals.

    On Monday, the park launched the Virunga Fund, made up of donations from groups including Earth Alliance, which was co-founded by DiCaprio, Emerson Collective and Global Wildlife Conservation. The European Commission have also contributed.

    Virunga Park said it was facing a “series of unprecedented threats”. In addition to the recent attack on rangers, the coronavirus outbreak has forced it to close to tourists, resulting in a significant loss of revenue.

    Scientists have also said Covid-19 poses an “existential threat” to the gorillas themselves.

    The World Wide Fund For Nature has warned that mountain gorillas are at risk of catching coronavirus because they share 98% of their DNA with humans.

    A month after Virunga stopped all tourism activities, 12 park rangers, a driver and four members of the local community were killed in a violent attack by around 60 militiamen.

    The group ambushed a convoy of civilians that was being protected by the rangers. A statement from the park at the time described it as an attack on the local civilian population, adding that the rangers were not the target.

    Kidnappers have previously been known to target tourists in the park. In 2018 attackers killed park ranger Rachel Masika Baraka during the brief kidnapping of two British tourists and their driver.

    ‘Twin threats’

    National Virunga Park director Emmanuel De Merode said he had “never been more worried” about the future of the park in light of the outbreaks of Ebola and Covid-19.

    “Virunga’s rangers are racing against the clock to protect both the local communities that surround the park and the endangered mountain gorilla population from these twin threats,” he said.

    The park said money raised would provide urgent support for staff on the ground to deliver critical disease prevention efforts, law enforcement, and protect endangered species.

    DiCaprio has become well known for his activism in recent years, particularly on environmental issues.

    In 2016 he appeared in Before The Flood, a documentary that saw him meet scientists and world leaders to discuss the dangers of climate change.

    Last month he helped launch America’s Food Fund, a fundraising initiative that aims to ensure all US citizens have access to a reliable supply of food.

    The 45-year-old became one of the world’s best-known actors in the late 1990s after appearing in Titanic and Romeo + Juliet.

    He has since starred in The Wolf of Wall Street, The Departed and Once Upon A Time in Hollywood. He won the Oscar for best actor in 2016 for The Revenant.

    Source: bbc.com

  • DR Congo leader replaces key aide arrested in April

    Félix Tshisekedi, president of the Democratic Republic of Congo, has replaced his chief of staff who is facing trial for alleged misappropriation of funds.

    Vital Kamerhe, a key political figure in the country whose party helped President Tshisekedi win the 2018 election, is accused of embezzling nearly $50m (£40.7m) intended for an infrastructure programme to mark the first 100 days of the president in office.

    He has pleaded not guilty.

    His position has now be taken by his former deputy Désiré Cashmir Kolongele, according to an announcement by the president’s spokesperson on Tuesday on state television.

    Mr Kamerhe has been held at a prison in the capital, Kinshasa, since 8 April. All his requests for bail have been rejected.

    Supporters of his Union for the Congolese Nation (UNC) have said that the charges are politically motivated.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Coronavirus: DR Congo reports highest single-day rise

    The Democratic Republic of Congo’s health ministry has confirmed 92 new coronavirus cases in the country, its highest single-day increase since the outbreak began in March.

    Some 69 cases were detected in the capital, Kinshasa, and another 23 cases in the south-west province of Kongo Central.

    The ministry has also said 212 suspected cases are being investigated.

    The Ndolo military prison in Kinshasa, a hot-spot of infections, has been disinfected after at least 104 people, including inmates and wardens, contracted the virus.

    Public Health Minister Eteni Longondo said on Tuesday that the situation was under control despite the significant increase in cases and the government was even considering reopening schools.

    The country has to date confirmed 705 cases and 34 deaths.

    Source: bbc.com

  • WHO emergency committee meets on Ebola after new DRC case

    The WHO said its emergency committee would meet Tuesday to discuss whether the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo still constitutes an international health emergency, after fresh cases were detected.

    The meeting comes a day after DR Congo had been expected to announce that the outbreak in the east of the country that began in August 2018 was over.

    The epidemic has killed 2,276 people to date. For it to be declared over, there have to be no new cases reported for 42 days—double the incubation period.

    But as the World Health Organization’s emergency committee met last Friday to determine whether its declaration of a so-called Public Health Emergency of International Concern, or PHEIC, could be lifted, a new case was reported.

    “We now have three cases, two people who have died, one person who is alive,” WHO spokeswoman Margaret Harris told reporters in a virtual briefing in Geneva on Tuesday.

    She said that all of the contacts of those cases had been traced and vaccinated and were being followed closely.

    DR Congo health authorities announced Friday that a 26-year-old man was listed as having died from the disease, and a young girl who was being treated in the same health centre passed away on Sunday.

    Both died in the city of Beni, epicentre of the outbreak.

    Due to the shifting situation, the WHO decided to reconvene its emergency committee to again evaluate whether or not the outbreak still constitutes an international health emergency, Harris said.

    It was scheduled to announce its decision later Tuesday.

    The DR Congo has meanwhile started a new 42-day countdown to declare an end to its 10th epidemic of the deadly haemorrhagic fever disease.

    Source: Theeastafrican.co.ke

  • DR Congo reports new Ebola case

    Few days before the outbreak of Ebola in the Democratic Republic of Congo was to be declared over, the World Health Organization (WHO) has revealed that a new case has been confirmed.

    Over 3,400 people have been infected and 2,200 have died since the outbreak was announced in DR Congo nearly two years away.

    Latest numbers as of 10 April 2020

     

    3453

    Total cases

     

    2264

    Total deaths

     

    1169

    Survivors

     

    SOURCEmynewsghana.net

     

     

    The authorities were preparing to declare the epidemic over on Sunday.

    But it now has to continue fighting Ebola as well as COVID-19.

  • DR Congo capital Kinshasa declares coronavirus shutdown

    The Democratic Republic of Congo authorities have announced a shutdown of the capital city, Kinshasa, from Saturday to stop the spread of coronavirus

    Governor Gentiny Ngobila said all residents, apart from essential workers such as medical staff, would have to stay at home for four days, starting on Saturday. They would then be allowed to stock up on food in the following two days. The same pattern is scheduled to be repeated for the next three weeks.

    The governor urged the people of Kinshasa not to panic or be misled by disinformation.

    Earlier this week, President Félix Tshisekedi ordered a ban on all travel to and from the capital.

    The country has confirmed 54 cases so far and quarantined nearly two thousand people who have been in contact with Covid-19 patients.

    A representative of the consumer rights association has warned against attempts by some businesses to increase prices during the shutdown

    Kinshasa is the only city to have recorded coronavirus cases in the country.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Cameroonian becomes DR Congo’s second virus patient

    The health authorities in the Democratic Republic of Congo have confirmed that a second person has tested positive for the new coronavirus and is being treated in hospital:

    The patient is a 46-year-old Cameroonian national who lives in DR Congo with his family.

    He returned to the country from France on 8 March, and did not show symptoms of the virus.

    DR Congo’s health authorities say they have so far identified 117 people who have come into contact with both of the country’s confirmed cases.

    The news comes a day after doctors in DR Congo decided to return to work, ending a two-month strike.

    Correspondents say the medical union signed an agreement with the government to improve their working conditions and pay.

    Source: bbc.com

  • DR Congo probes death of army military spy chief Delphin Kahimbi

    The army in the Democratic Republic of Congo is investigating the death of its head of intelligence.

    Delphin Kahimbi was found dead at his home in the capital, Kinshasa, on Friday, the day he was meant to appear before the country’s security council.

    He was to answer charges that he was involved in a plot to destabilise President Félix Tshisekedi.

    Gen Kahimbi was on an EU sanctions list for alleged human rights violations and hindering the democratic process.

    Mr Tshisekedi took over from Joseph Kabila in January last year, the first peaceful transfer of power in the country in nearly 60 years – though many disputed the election result.

    Mr Kabila remains politically powerful and his party is in a coalition government with Mr Tshisekedi’s party.

    ‘Impressive strategist’

    Gen Kahimbi was undoubtedly one of the most powerful figures during Mr Kabila’s time in power, reports the BBC’s Gaius Kowene from Kinshasa.

    To some the military intelligence chief was an impressive strategist, who helped defeat rebels in the east of DR Congo, our reporter says.

    But to others he was a symbol of the torture and oppression of opponents of the former president, he says.

    It is not clear yet what exactly killed him. Some sources say he took his own life; his wife has been quoted as saying he had a heart attack. The army released a statement saying his death was a great loss.

    Earlier in the week, several sources said the general had been suspended because of the allegations he was facing.

    The US ambassador to DR Congo tweeted on Thursday: “As we have consistently said, those who are corrupt, commit violations of human rights, or disrupt the democratic process should be held accountable.”

    A senior army commander has said the allegations were baseless and intended to tarnish Gen Kahimbi’s image.

     

    Source: BBC
  • DR Congo: Many dead as plane crashes into homes

    At least 27 people have died after a passenger plane crashed into houses in the city of Goma in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, local officials say.

    The victims included nine people from the same family who were in one of the houses hit in the Mapendo area.

    The small aircraft went down shortly after taking off from the city’s airport on Sunday morning. The cause of the crash is still unclear.

    The plane was carrying 17 passengers and two crew members, officials say.

    Read:Plane crashes into California house killing five

    Air accidents are relatively frequent in DR Congo amid lax safety standards and poor maintenance, and all the country’s commercial carriers are banned from operating in the European Union.

    What is known about the air disaster?

    The Dornier-228 twin-turboprop aircraft – owned by private carrier Busy Bee – crashed about a minute after take-off, a source at Goma airport told the BBC.

    The plane had been scheduled to fly to Beni, 350km (220 miles) north of Goma.

    Read:VIDEO: Pilot crashes plane into his own house after fight with his wife

    A witness, Djemo Medar, said he saw the plane “spinning three times in the air and emitting a lot of smoke”.

    “When the plane crashed many of us rushed there, we know the pilot, his name is Didier; he was shouting ‘Help me, help me’, but we had no way to get to him because the fire was so powerful,” he told Reuters news agency.

    Sources said the plane experienced engine failure right after take-off, the BBC’s Emery Makumeno reports from the capital, Kinshasa.

    It was not immediately known how many residents were in their homes when the plane crashed.

    North Kivu regional governor Nzanzu Kasivita offered his condolences to the families of survivors.

    Read:Cargo plane crashes in Congo with presidential staff on board

    The BBC has contacted Busy Bee for comment.

    Source: bbc.com

  • DR Congo measles: Nearly 5,000 dead in major outbreak

    Measles has killed nearly 5,000 people in the Democratic Republic of Congo in 2019, authorities said, after the disease spread to all the provinces in the country.

    Close to a quarter of a million people have been infected this year alone.
    The World Health Organization (WHO) says this is the world’s largest and fastest-moving epidemic.

    Measles in DR Congo has now killed more than twice the number who have died of Ebola there in the last 15 months.

    Measles claims over 2500 lives in DRC

    The Congolese government and the WHO launched an emergency vaccination programme in September that aimed to inoculate more than 800,000 children.
    But poor infrastructure, attacks on health centres and a lack of access to routine healthcare have all hindered efforts to stop the spread of the disease.

    Four million children have been vaccinated, but experts warn that this amounts to less than half of the total in the country – and not enough vaccines are available.
    The majority of those infected with measles in the country are infants.

    What is measles?
    Measles is a virus that initially causes a runny nose, sneezing and fever.
    A few days later it leads to a blotchy rash that starts off on the face and spreads across the body.

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    Most people will recover, but measles can cause life-long disability. It can be deadly, especially if it causes pneumonia in the lungs or encephalitis (swelling in the brain).

    It is estimated that a global total of 110,000 people die from measles each year.

    Source: www.bbc.com