Watching Ebola Return

CounterPunch Exclusives

CounterPunch Exclusives

Watching Ebola Return

Colorized scanning electron micrograph of Ebola virus particles (green) both budding and attached to the surface of infected VERO E6 cells (orange). Image captured and color-enhanced at the NIAID Integrated Research Facility in Fort Detrick, Maryland. Credit: NIAID. 

As I write, news is breaking of at least six Americans exposed to Ebola. I’m no doctor, epidemiologist, or public-health expert, but I have been following closely this latest Ebola outbreak through reports from the WHO, Africa CDC, international news outlets, and disease specialists.

What concentrates the mind is how outbreaks spread, how governments respond, and how political and humanitarian conditions can shape a crisis long before most of the world hears about it.

The current outbreak appears to have begun in Ituri province in the Democratic Republic of Congo. WHO says it was first alerted on 5 May 2026 to a high-mortality illness in Mongbwalu Health Zone. Early testing reportedly failed to detect Ebola because the first laboratory tests came back negative. Further investigation and more detailed testing later confirmed the rarer Bundibugyo strain of the virus on 15 May.

By 16 May, WHO was reporting eight laboratory-confirmed cases, 246 suspected cases, and 80 suspected deaths in Ituri, across at least Bunia, Rwampara, and Mongbwalu health zones. Uganda had also confirmed two imported cases among people who had travelled from the DRC, including one death. WHO declared the outbreak a Public Health Emergency of International Concern—a PHEIC—on 17 May, while making clear that this is not the same as declaring a pandemic.

What struck me personally is that confirmed cases had reached Kampala itself. Kampala is Uganda’s capital, in the south-central part of the country near Lake Victoria, and I was there not that long ago. Even then, it was clear how........

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