An eastern province in the Democratic Republic of Congo has banned funeral wakes in a strict bid to contain the accelerating spread of Ebola.
The provincial government of Ituri implemented the emergency restriction on Friday, just one day after residents clashed with police officers while attempting to forcefully recover the body of a deceased victim.
The confrontation underscores the immense difficulty international health workers face when attempting to enforce rigid disease-control protocols that directly conflict with deeply rooted community burial customs.
The civil unrest erupted in the town of Rwampara after the family of a local football player rejected a secure medical burial, disputing the official diagnosis that the virus caused his death.
In response to the rising tensions, provincial authorities ordered that all burials must now be handled exclusively by specialised medical teams and prohibited the transport of corpses by private vehicles.
Additionally, the government has capped public gatherings at a maximum of 50 people and suspended the local football league to limit community transmission.
Controlling this specific outbreak is exceptionally difficult because the World Health Organisation recently identified the pathogen as the rare Bundibugyo strain, for which there is no approved vaccine or virus-specific treatment.
Health officials confirmed that the current chain of infection originally began in Ituri’s capital, Bunia, before rapidly multiplying when mourners touched a deceased victim during a traditional funeral in a nearby town.
Ebola victims remain highly contagious after death, and unsafe handling of remains without protective gear is a main driver of the virus.
The health crisis is further complicated by widespread armed violence in the region, which prevents medical teams from effectively reaching affected areas.
With nearly 750 suspected cases and 177 suspected deaths recorded, neighbouring Rwanda has responded by denying entry to foreign nationals who have recently travelled through the DRC.
To help combat the unfolding emergency and counter a growing wave of local misinformation, the United Nations has announced the release of approximately $60 million from its emergency fund to support containment efforts.
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