The Guardian (USA)

The response to DRC’s Ebola crisis isn’t working. Here’s what we need to do

- David Miliband

It is almost a year since an Ebola outbreak was formally declared in the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s northeaste­rn provinces of Ituri and North Kivu. The current outbreak is DRC’s 10th since 1976 and is now the second largest in recorded history, with more than 2,300 confirmed cases and 1,500 dead.

But the DRC outbreak isn’t just notable because of its length and death toll. This is the first Ebola crisis in an active conflict zone – with dire consequenc­es for the effort to eradicate the disease. The eastern DRC has been caught in a series of successive conflicts since 1994 that have killed more than 5 million people, driven more than 4 million people from their homes, and left 13 million people struggling to feed themselves. That means this Ebola crisis is a humanitari­an emergency, not just a public health emergency, and needs to be treated as such. Failure to recognise this will inevitably lead to the failure to control the disease.

Containing Ebola in a conflict zone is more complex, more dangerous, and more challengin­g than anything the health community faced in the 2014 west Africa outbreak. Operating in a conflict zone brings new dangers, like the burning down of health centres – and the 174 attacks this year on Ebola workers by local actors suspicious of anyone with ties to the central government. It brings delicate negotiatio­ns with local politician­s, community leaders

and more than 50 armed groups operating in the area. It brings new imperative­s, including operating in a neutral and impartial way to ensure that saving human lives remains paramount. And it brings new concerns about the spread of the disease, as continued violence and forced displaceme­nt close to the Ugandan and South Sudanese borders increase the risk of cross-border transmissi­on.

This failure to recognise the unique demands of a conflict zone response explains why the internatio­nal community has been unable to eradicate the outbreak one year after the first confirmed cases. Despite successful­ly vaccinatin­g nearly 150,000 people, screening 70 million people, and throwing $50m at the problem between February and April alone, the Ebola crisis has deteriorat­ed significan­tly since March. My Internatio­nal Rescue Committee colleagues running disease control operations at 50 health centres in the region say there is good reason to fear the problem will continue to get worse, not better, without a strategic reset of the response.

Today in Geneva there is a vital opportunit­y for such a reset as the UN’s leadership meets to evaluate the response strategy. Turning the tide on the outbreak and preventing it from spreading to other conflict zones such as South Sudan requires five steps.

First, we need to place community trust at the heart of the response. Of the 1,500 Ebola-related deaths in this crisis, 68% have occurred in the community as opposed to in health centres – a sign that people infected with the virus do not yet trust medical profession­als to treat them. Building trust requires a proper dialogue, not just internatio­nal staff telling local community members what to do. For instance, in 2014 burial services for Ebola victims became a point of contention, but dialogue with community members allowed for compromise­s that simultaneo­usly reduced the likelihood of infection while allowing families to give their loved ones a proper burial.

Second, there needs to be a different approach to security. The use of armed police and military escorts raises understand­able suspicion in a region devastated by 25 years of violence, and makes health workers and facilities targets for attack by local armed groups.

Third, clear and empowered leadership is critical. The UN secretary general’s appointmen­t of David Gressly as UN Ebola emergency response coordinato­r has been a welcome improvemen­t, but he needs to be the single point of command for all agencies involved in the response.

Fourth, every actor in the response needs to focus on their area of expertise. With multiple UN agencies, the Red Cross, and a number of internatio­nal and local NGOs – including ours – operating in the region, we need clear roles and responsibi­lities that reflect our different skills. The World Health Organizati­on has the expertise to provide technical oversight for the response and should be directed to focus on that role, while NGOs and the Red Cross should use their experience in programme delivery to lead the implementa­tion of health services in a cost-efficient and rapid manner.

Fifth, the response should spend well, not just spend more. By using capable local staff, minimising expensive security arrangemen­ts, and prioritisi­ng services over internatio­nal salaries, the NGOs participat­ing in the response can deliver better services to more people for less money. The new strategy response plan should direct more funding to implementi­ng partners in order to improve the quality and the costeffect­iveness of the response.

Containing the ongoing DRC Ebola outbreak won’t be straightfo­rward – operating in humanitari­an emergencie­s rarely is. But these five steps, which we have learned the hard way from working in conflict environmen­ts, give us a chance to stop the spread of this disease before it goes too much further.

• David Miliband is president and CEO of Internatio­nal Rescue Committee and a former foreign secretary

 ??  ?? ‘This is the first Ebola crisis in an active conflict zone – making it a humanitari­an emergency.’ An Ebola patient is treated in Beni, in the north-east of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Photograph: Baz Ratner/Reuters
‘This is the first Ebola crisis in an active conflict zone – making it a humanitari­an emergency.’ An Ebola patient is treated in Beni, in the north-east of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Photograph: Baz Ratner/Reuters
 ??  ?? ‘The eastern DRC has been caught in a series of conflicts since 1994 that have killed more than 5 million people.’ Soldiers of the Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (FARDC) in Djugu, eastern DRC. Photograph: John Wessels/AFP/Getty Images
‘The eastern DRC has been caught in a series of conflicts since 1994 that have killed more than 5 million people.’ Soldiers of the Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (FARDC) in Djugu, eastern DRC. Photograph: John Wessels/AFP/Getty Images

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