Los Angeles Times

Rebel attack hampers Ebola fight

In Congo, killings and child abductions by militants stall efforts to contain the virus.

- Associated press

JOHANNESBU­RG, South Africa — Congolese rebels killed 15 civilians and abducted a dozen children in an attack at the epicenter of the latest deadly Ebola outbreak, Congo’s military said Sunday, as the violence again forced crucial virusconta­inment efforts to be suspended.

“It will be very hard to stop the outbreak if this violence continues,” said the World Health Organizati­on’s emergencie­s chief, Peter Salama.

A regional WHO official said it was difficult to say how long work would be affected.

Confirmed Ebola cases have reached 202 in this outbreak, including 118 deaths.

Allied Democratic Forces rebels attacked Congolese army positions and several neighborho­ods of Beni on Saturday and into Sunday, Capt. Mak Hazukay Mongha said. The United Nations peacekeepi­ng mission said its troops exchanged fire with rebels in Beni’s Mayangose area.

Angry over the killings, locals carried four of the bodies to the town hall, where police dispersed the residents with tear gas. While some health workers took refuge in a hospital, the protesters destroyed a number of government buildings and blocked all traffic, the Democratic Republic of Congo’s Health Ministry said.

Vehicles of aid organizati­ons and the U.N. mission were pelted with stones, the U.N.-backed Radio Okapi reported.

The ADF rebels have killed hundreds of civilians in recent years and are just one of several militias active in Congo’s far northeast.

Another deadly attack last month in Beni forced the suspension of Ebola-containmen­t efforts for days, complicati­ng work to track suspected contacts of infected people. Since then, many of the new confirmed Ebola cases have been reported in Beni, and the rate of new cases overall has more than doubled, alarming aid groups.

Health efforts in recent weeks had started to show results, and this new attack “will bring us back,” said Dr. Michel Yao, WHO’s incident manager for Ebola in North Kivu province.

Work in Beni was suspended Sunday and “tomorrow, we don’t know yet,” Yao said, noting that the burials of victims can be tense. “We understand. We are sympatheti­c. It’s not easy to lose relatives. At the same time, it could affect the [outbreak] response.”

The attack came after two medical agents with the Congolese army were shot to death by another rebel group — the first time health workers have been killed in this outbreak.

Congo’s health minister called it a “dark day” for everyone fighting Ebola.

Mai-Mai rebels surged from the forest and opened fire on the unarmed agents with the army’s rapid interventi­on medical unit outside Butembo city, the Health Ministry said.

Health workers in this outbreak, declared on Aug. 1, have described hearing gunshots daily, operating under the armed escort of U.N. peacekeepe­rs or Congolese security forces and ending work by sundown to lower the risk of attack.

Community resistance is also a problem, and Congo’s Health Ministry has reported “numerous aggression­s” against health workers. Early this month, two Red Cross volunteers were severely injured in a confrontat­ion with wary residents in a region traumatize­d by decades of fighting and facing an Ebola outbreak for the first time.

“Our agents will continue to go into the field each day to fulfill the mission entrusted to them,” Health Minister Oly Ilunga said. “They are true heroes, and we will continue to take all necessary measures so that they can do their job safely.”

On Wednesday, WHO said it was “deeply concerned” by the outbreak but that it does not yet warrant being declared a global emergency. An outbreak must be “an extraordin­ary event” that might cross borders, requiring a coordinate­d response. Confirmed cases have been found near the heavily traveled border with Uganda.

In the latest example of the rumors that pose another serious challenge to containing the virus, the Health Ministry said 22 young people in Butembo dug up an Ebola victim and opened the body bag to verify that health workers had not taken organs from the body.

They ended up touching highly infectious bodily fluids, the ministry said. “The next day, they agreed to be vaccinated,” joining the more than 20,000 people who have received vaccinatio­ns so far.

 ?? Al-Hadji Kudra Maliro Associated Press ?? RELATIVES mourn over bodies of civilians killed by Allied Democratic Forces in Beni, Congo, this month.
Al-Hadji Kudra Maliro Associated Press RELATIVES mourn over bodies of civilians killed by Allied Democratic Forces in Beni, Congo, this month.

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