Uganda slams ‘unfair’ Ebola air travel restrictions

Officials from the Ituri Provincial Health Division (DPS), humanitarian partners and health sector representatives undergo temperature screening and handwashing before entering the Ebola treatment centre of Rwampara General Reference Hospital in Rwampara, Ituri Province, Democratic Republic of Congo, on June 12, 2026. (AFP)
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Updated 13 June 2026
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Uganda slams ‘unfair’ Ebola air travel restrictions

Kampala: Uganda has criticized air travel restrictions imposed by countries including the United States over an Ebola outbreak which has spilt over from the neighboring Democratic Republic of Congo as “unfair.”
The east African country’s response to the latest outbreak of the deadly haemorrhagic fever has been broadly praised by public health officials, with only two deaths out of 19 confirmed cases since the alarm was sounded in the DRC in mid-May.
Almost all of them were Congolese nationals who had crossed the border from their home country, where more than 676 cases have been confirmed and 136 people have died since May 15.
“Today, the Ugandan Health Ministry, together with the Civil Aviation Authority, Ambassadors, and airline operators serving Uganda, discussed the unfair travel restrictions imposed on Uganda due to the current Ebola situation,” Diana Atwine, permanent secretary for the health ministry, said on X on Friday.
“While we appreciate the need for vigilance, blanket restrictions undermine confidence in countries that report outbreaks openly, and are not commensurate with the actual risk.”
Besides the United States, Canada and the United Arab Emirates are among the countries to have imposed entry bans on travelers from Uganda, the DRC and neighboring South Sudan as a result of the outbreak.
While the World Health Organization’s chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus praised Kampala’s strategy on a visit to Uganda on Monday, the United Nations health agency warned on Friday that the outbreak was spreading to new areas in the neighboring DRC.
No vaccine nor specific treatment exists for the Bundibugyo strain of Ebola responsible for the latest outbreak, the 17th to hit the vast central African country.
Spread by close contact and infected bodily fluids, the disease has killed more than 15,000 people in Africa over the past 50 years.