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UN Provides $40 Million in Response to New Ebola Outbreak, Other Emergencies in DR Congo 


FILE - Moise Vaghemi, an Ebola survivor who works as a nurse, tends to a suspected Ebola sufferer inside the Biosecure Emergency Care Unit at an Ebola treatment center in Katwa, DRC, Oct. 3, 2019.
FILE - Moise Vaghemi, an Ebola survivor who works as a nurse, tends to a suspected Ebola sufferer inside the Biosecure Emergency Care Unit at an Ebola treatment center in Katwa, DRC, Oct. 3, 2019.

The U.N. has released $40 million from its Central Emergency Response Fund to help tackle a new outbreak of Ebola and other health and humanitarian crises in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The re-emergence of Ebola in Mbandaka, in DRC’s Equateur province, a week ago has dashed hopes of finally bringing this deadly disease to a timely end.

More than 2,200 people have died since the epidemic started in eastern Ituri, North and South Kivu provinces in August 2018.

Meanwhile, international support for humanitarian operations in Congo has fallen off a cliff. The U.N. hopes its injection of $40 million to tackle Ebola and other health and humanitarian crises in the country will kickstart a more generous response from donors.

FILE - A police officer stands at the deserted crossing point between the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda amid concerns about the spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19).
FILE - A police officer stands at the deserted crossing point between the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda amid concerns about the spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19).

To date, the United Nations has received only 13 percent of this year’s $2 billion appeal. The U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs notes the DRC is battling a dangerous mix of health and humanitarian crises, including the COVID-19 pandemic.

OCHA spokesman Jens Laerke acknowledges the fight against the pandemic is putting economies around the world under enormous financial strain. But he tells VOA the fight against the coronavirus cannot be won unless it is won in all countries. He adds the fight against COVID-19 must not be waged at the expense of other critical humanitarian needs.

“The fight against other diseases — measles, Ebola; other issues, such as hunger, child malnutrition and so on will continue unless we also continue to direct funding to those issues. So, we are asking the donors not to make a choice either or, but to do both,” he said.

The DRC is struggling under a plethora of humanitarian needs, besides Ebola, including the world’s largest measles outbreak, as well as conflict and massive displacement in the eastern part of the country.

Laerke warns failure to provide the means to tackle these problems will have widespread repercussions.

“People will only survive, if we fight all of this at the same time because if we take our eyes off the ball of one disease, another one will pop up and they will die from that instead,” he said.

Money from the emergency fund with strengthen the DRC’s health services for Ebola survivors and get community-based surveillance and rapid response systems running. The fund also will provide food, shelter, water and sanitation, and a myriad of other essential services, including containment measures for COVID-19.

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