Africa CDC says DRC's Ebola outbreak is the fastest-growing ever, with 600 dead and cases doubling every 28 days
African health authorities declared Thursday that the Bundibugyo Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo has now killed more than 600 people and is spreading faster than any previous outbreak on record; the WHO puts the case fatality rate at 34%, and health officials say the virus is outpacing the response
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Summary
Africa CDC and the WHO declared Thursday that the Bundibugyo Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo is the fastest-growing on record, with more than 600 people dead and cases doubling every 28 days. The WHO puts the case fatality rate at 34%, among the highest of any Ebola variant. Speaking from Nairobi, Africa CDC reported that laboratory capacity has improved, now exceeding 2,000 tests per day across affected areas, but characterised the gains as insufficient against the pace of spread. The outbreak, declared a Public Health Emergency of International Concern earlier this year, recorded 1,094 confirmed cases and 277 deaths as of late June, meaning deaths have more than doubled in roughly two weeks.
The split
West African and Gulf outlets (Premium Times Nigeria, The Peninsula Qatar) lead with the Africa CDC's progress briefing, framing the story as institutional response meeting an overmatched crisis. Asia-Pacific coverage (South China Morning Post) foregrounds the structural failure, focusing on the doubling rate and the gap between case growth and containment capacity. US legal wire Courthouse News led earliest with the WHO mortality figure, using a more clinical register. No DRC or Francophone African coverage is in the crawl feed for this event.
By the numbers
- 600+, deaths to date
- 28 days, the case-doubling interval (Africa CDC)
- 34%, case fatality rate (WHO)
- 2,000+, Ebola tests per day now conducted in affected areas
Why it matters
The Bundibugyo strain is less studied than the Zaire Ebola variant, with fewer approved treatment protocols and a thinner evidence base for the approved vaccines. A 34% fatality rate exceeds most historical Ebola outbreaks. The outbreak is centred in eastern DRC, where armed conflict, population displacement, and health system collapse from years of war complicate containment. The doubling-every-28-days trajectory, if sustained, would put case counts in the thousands within weeks.
What to watch
- Whether WHO or Africa CDC escalates the PHEIC declaration or convenes an emergency committee
- DRC government movement and border restrictions, particularly toward Uganda, Rwanda, and Burundi
- Vaccine and treatment supply availability from the international stockpile
- Whether the France case from June triggers expanded European surveillance protocols