Ebola outbreak in Congo over, says WHO

Congo will begin a 90-day period of enhanced disease surveillance. (Reuters)
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Updated 01 December 2025
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Ebola outbreak in Congo over, says WHO

  • The Ebola outbreak was the Central African nation’s 16th since the disease was first identified in 1976, according to the WHO

KINSHASA: An Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo is now over, Congolese health officials and the UN’s World Health Organization said on Monday, after the country went 42 consecutive days without recording a new case. The outbreak, declared on Sept. 4 after the disease was identified in the Bulape health zone in Congo’s Kasai province, was the country’s first since 2022. Out of a total of 64 cases, 45 people died and 19 others recovered, according to the Congolese Health Ministry.
From the early days of the outbreak, Congo used a revamped national surveillance system to enable authorities to rapidly map the affected area and contain transmission.

SPEEDREAD

• Outbreak declared in Congo in early September.

• Of 64 cases, 45 people died from the disease.

• Congo deployed revamped surveillance system to control the spread.

“Controlling and ending this Ebola outbreak in three months is a remarkable achievement,” WHO regional director Dr. Mohamed Janabi said in a statement.
Congo will now begin a 90-day period of enhanced disease surveillance, the statement said.
The Ebola outbreak was the Central African nation’s 16th since the disease was first identified in 1976, according to the WHO.
There have been no new cases since Sept. 25, and the last Ebola patient was discharged on Oct. 19.
Two maximum incubation periods of 21 days each must pass without the detection of new cases before an outbreak can be declared officially over.
The Ebola virus, a rare but often fatal illness in humans, is endemic to Congo’s vast tropical forests. It is transmitted through contact with blood and other bodily fluids and causes symptoms including fever, body aches, and diarrhea.

 


UK starts visa requirements for St. Lucians

Updated 4 sec ago
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UK starts visa requirements for St. Lucians

  • Saint Lucia’s government said it was actively engaging with British government
  • It said it would continue talks to “explore pathways for maintaining strong mobility arrangements“

CASTRIES: Britain has introduced a visa requirement for Saint Lucians effective from Thursday citing a “notable increase” in nationals from the small Caribbean nation claiming asylum, Saint Lucia’s government said in a statement.
Immigration is one of Britain’s most politically sensitive issues, and Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s government has sought to show it is tightening the system as the ⁠populist Reform UK party ⁠gains ground in opinion polls.
Saint Lucia, a former British colony, has a population of about 180,000. Last year, the World Bank estimated a net emigration of just 23 ⁠people.
Its government said it was actively engaging with British government and would continue talks to “explore pathways for maintaining strong mobility arrangements.”
It said it was informed in a letter dated Wednesday.
Saint Lucia is a member of the Commonwealth, an association of mostly former British colonies. Before the 1970s, nationals of many of ⁠these ⁠had the right to live and work in the UK. Saint Lucians previously needed a 16 pound Electronic Travel Authorization (ETA) to travel to the UK. \

There will be a six-week transition for ETA holders, its government said.
On Tuesday, Britain said it would block study visas for Afghanistan, Cameroon, Myanmar and Sudan and halt work visas for Afghans.