DRC’s Ebola Crisis Is Becoming Africa’s Next Major Test

The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has once again found itself at the centre of one of Africa’s most serious public health emergencies. Confirmed Ebola infections have now exceeded 2,000, making this the country’s fastest-growing Ebola outbreak on record. More than 750 people have already died, while hundreds of health workers, the very people leading the response, are threatening a full-scale strike over months of unpaid salaries.

The numbers alone are alarming. What makes this outbreak particularly worrying is that it is spreading faster than authorities can contain it. The World Health Organization (WHO) has warned that the epidemic remains in an expansion phase and that current funding and response capacity are falling far short of what is needed.

This is more than a health crisis

Africa has dealt with Ebola before. Countries such as Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea experienced devastating outbreaks between 2014 and 2016 that claimed more than 11,000 lives and crippled already fragile health systems. Those outbreaks demonstrated that infectious diseases do not remain confined within borders. They disrupt trade, education, investment and public confidence long before they spread internationally.

The DRC’s current outbreak presents a different challenge. It is being driven by the Bundibugyo strain of Ebola, for which there is no approved vaccine. Experimental treatments are still undergoing clinical trials, leaving health workers with fewer tools than they had during previous outbreaks.

The outbreak is also unfolding in eastern DRC, where armed conflict, mass displacement and weak infrastructure have complicated every aspect of the response. More than 80 percent of new infections are linked to unknown chains of transmission, meaning health officials are struggling to identify where the virus is spreading and who has been exposed.

Why unpaid health workers matter

Perhaps the most overlooked aspect of this crisis is the growing frustration among frontline health workers. Doctors, nurses and support staff have protested over unpaid wages despite working in one of the world’s highest-risk environments. Some treatment centres have already experienced disruptions, raising fears that larger strikes could weaken containment efforts even further.

This highlights a broader challenge facing many African healthcare systems. Emergency responses often depend on international funding, but when financing slows or administrative systems fail, frontline workers carry the burden. An outbreak cannot be contained if the people responsible for tracing contacts, treating patients and educating communities are unable or unwilling to continue working.

The COVID-19 pandemic illustrated a similar lesson. Countries with exhausted health workers and overstretched hospitals struggled to maintain routine healthcare while responding to a fast-moving disease. Ebola presents the same dilemma, but with an even higher fatality rate.

What this means for Africa

The implications extend well beyond the DRC.

The country shares borders with nine African states, making regional cooperation essential. Population movement through trade routes, refugee flows and informal border crossings increases the risk of cross-border transmission. Uganda has already reported imported cases linked to the outbreak, prompting WHO and Africa CDC to strengthen regional preparedness.

An uncontrolled outbreak could also discourage tourism, delay infrastructure projects and increase pressure on already stretched public health budgets across Central and East Africa. Investor confidence is closely tied to stability, and recurring health emergencies often raise the perceived risk of doing business in affected regions.

Equally important is public trust. Ebola outbreaks are frequently accompanied by misinformation and fear. Communities that distrust authorities may avoid testing, refuse treatment or hide infected relatives, allowing the virus to spread unnoticed. This has been a recurring obstacle in previous outbreaks and remains one of the biggest barriers to containment today.

The response Africa needs

Containing the outbreak will require more than emergency funding. Governments and regional institutions must ensure health workers are paid promptly, strengthen disease surveillance and improve laboratory capacity before outbreaks escalate.

The Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention and WHO have already launched a continental preparedness strategy, recognising that infectious diseases demand coordinated regional action rather than isolated national responses.

The DRC’s Ebola outbreak is a reminder that health security has become inseparable from economic security and regional stability. Africa has gained valuable experience from previous epidemics, but experience alone cannot replace sustained investment in healthcare systems.

The real measure of success will not simply be whether this outbreak is eventually contained. It will be whether Africa emerges better prepared for the next one.

Written by: 

*Sesona Mdlokovana 

Associate at BRICS+ Consulting Group

Africa Specialist

**The Views expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of Independent Media or IOL.

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