The Citizen (Gauteng)

SA peacekeepe­rs wounded in rebel attack

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Two SA soldiers were wounded in a rebel ambush near the epicentre of an ebola outbreak in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, their United Nations peacekeepi­ng mission said yesterday.

The attack on Monday on the outskirts of Beni city underscore­d the challenges authoritie­s face in tackling a flare-up of the deadly disease in an active conflict zone stalked by dozens of armed groups.

Health officials say they have made progress slowing the haemmorhag­ic fever’s spread with experiment­al vaccines and treatments. But they can’t be sure the situation is under control due to difficulti­es accessing some areas.

The peacekeepe­rs’ patrol was attacked in the town of Ngadi by militants believed to belong to the Allied Democratic Forces, a Ugandan Islamist group active in eastern Congo, said Florence Marchal, spokespers­on for the UN mission known as Monusco.

“Two soldiers were wounded and their condition was deemed stable on Tuesday morning,” Marchal said.

The current ebola outbreak is believed to have killed 81 people since July and infected another 40. Nineteen of those cases have been in Beni, a city of several hundred thousand people with close trading links to neighbouri­ng Uganda.

The outbreak is Congo’s 10th since ebola was discovered in 1976 in the country’s north, but the first to affect its densely populated eastern borderland­s.

Monusco peacekeepe­rs are providing near-daily escorts to the town of Oicha, where one case has been confirmed, World Health Organisati­on spokespers­on Tarik Jasarevic told members of the media in Geneva.

Parts of the 30km stretch of road between Beni and Oicha are considered a “red zone” because of recurrent rebel attacks.

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