Central African Republic declares cholera outbreak after 24 deaths near Bangui
The health ministry confirmed 197 cases and 24 deaths in the Bimbo and Mbaiki districts southwest of the capital, the country's fifth recorded epidemic
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Summary
The Central African Republic declared a Cholera outbreak on June 26, after the Ministry of Health and Population confirmed 197 cases and 24 deaths in the Bimbo and Mbaiki health districts southwest of the capital, Bangui. Health Minister Pierre Somse said the laboratory confirmation came with support from the Institut Pasteur in Bangui, and that barrier measures had already been deployed in affected villages with more rolling out to surrounding towns. This is the country's fifth recorded cholera epidemic. The declaration lands inside a sharp regional surge: Who AFRO reported cholera cases across southern and central Africa rose more than sevenfold in the first six weeks of 2026 versus a year earlier, driven by flooding and displacement that contaminated water and wrecked sanitation. Authorities are still investigating the source in the Central African Republic.
The split
Francophone African outlets ([[Jeune Afrique]], SeneNews) lead with the Institut Pasteur confirmation and the country's epidemic history, framing it as a recurring Water-and-sanitation failure across the Sahel and Congo basin. Gulf and Western pickups (Arab News, La Libre) reach for the 2016 precedent of 500-plus infections. WHO's regional framing is the one that connects the dots most: this is a single climate-linked wave, with flood-borne contamination as the common cause across multiple countries, not an isolated CAR event.
By the numbers
- 24, deaths confirmed as of the June 26 declaration
- 197, cases confirmed in Bimbo and Mbaiki
- 5th, recorded cholera epidemic in CAR's modern history
- 7x, regional rise in southern and central African cholera cases, first six weeks of 2026 vs 2025
- 4,320 cases and 56 deaths, logged across five southern African countries, 1 Jan to 15 Feb 2026
Why it matters
Cholera is a sanitation and water disease, and CAR is among the world's poorest states with thin health infrastructure and active displacement. An outbreak in peri-urban districts ringing the capital can scale fast. The regional sevenfold surge signals that the rainy season and flood contamination are reopening cholera corridors across central and southern Africa at once.
What to watch
- Whether case counts climb in Bangui proper, where density would accelerate spread
- Oral cholera vaccine deployment, and whether the global stockpile can cover another African demand spike
- WHO AFRO's next multi-country epidemiological update for the central-Africa trajectory
- Source confirmation: contaminated water point, food, or cross-border importation