-
'I'm afraid for my life': Romanians in shock after drone crash
-
PSG still 'hungry' for Champions League glory: Dembele
-
Iran says no trust in US 'words', waiting for Washington to act
-
Swiatek advances at French Open as Djokovic faces Fonseca
-
Photo and video journalists in Gaza to receive 'Golden Pen' award
-
Trees taking drastic measures to survive climate-driven heat
-
Andreeva sweeps into last 16 at French Open
-
McCullum urges England to 'box smart' like New Zealand
-
EU wants 'robust' defence against China trade imbalance
-
France rugby star Drean to have heart surgery
-
WHO chief in Ebola-hit DR Congo which sees first recovery
-
Narvaez drops out of Giro d'Italia, points jersey bid over
-
Anti-Israel tennis ball protest disrupts Ireland-Qatar football tie
-
Swiatek qualifies for French Open last 16
-
Vance says progress made as US-Iran deal awaits Trump green light
-
France defender Konate set to leave Liverpool: reports
-
German ex-minister faces perjury charges over failed car toll plan
-
Kanye West cleared to play in Netherlands
-
Loyalty could be fatal to Argentina's World Cup title defence, says Bertoni
-
Stocks rise, oil eases on hopes of US-Iran truce deal
-
Polka-dots and hypnotic riffs fuel viral duo Angine de Poitrine
-
French GDP slips 0.1% in first quarter, raising spectre of recession
-
WHO chief in capital of Ebola-hit DR Congo
-
Azmoun: Iran's absent talisman unafraid of controversy
-
PNG leader says no foreign bases as Australia's defence presence grows
-
Russian drone hits Romania apartment block, drawing NATO, EU outrage
-
Migrants try to flee to Bangladesh fearing India crackdown
-
Digital G7 discusses online child protection
-
'If Ebola comes, we'll be wiped out': DR Congo conflict-displaced
-
'Biggest circus in town' the World Cup set for betting frenzy
-
Rayasi's Bordeaux-Begles expecting 'tough' Top 14 run-in
-
Arsenal aiming to dethrone dynasty-chasing PSG
-
Argentina eye World Cup double ahead of Group J opener
-
Norway's natural-born goalscorer Haaland finally gets global stage
-
Deschamps bidding to end glorious France reign on a high at World Cup
-
France headline tough World Cup Group I as Mbappe faces Haaland
-
Djokovic meets Fonseca in French Open generation game
-
Can Messi deliver again for Argentina at his final World Cup?
-
Football eyes NFL throne says 1994 World Cup architect
-
Blue Origin rocket explodes on launch pad
-
China leaders skip Asia defence summit headlined by US
-
War trauma pushes more Ukrainians to become artists
-
Aliens and fine art for 'weird kid' who became top MMA fighter
-
Japan bans photos at beach volleyball after 'malicious' pictures
-
Japan population sees record five-year drop: census
-
'Robots need clothes': humanoids hit catwalk in Seoul
-
Light, flight, and rights: 250 years of US history in 30 objects
-
Wembanyama and aggressive Spurs force game seven against Thunder
-
New gold rush threatens indigenous havens in Brazil's Amazon
-
Asia stocks surge, oil falls on hopes of US-Iran truce deal
WHO chief in Ebola-hit DR Congo which sees first recovery
The UN health chief was on Friday in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where authorities are struggling to contain the spread of a deadly Ebola outbreak but the recovery of a patient, the first since the crisis began, was confirmed.
World Health Organization (WHO) head Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus arrived in the capital, Kinsasha, late on Thursday, two weeks after the outbreak of the highly contagious haemorrhagic fever was declared.
He had been due to travel on Friday to Ituri, a remote northeastern province that is the epicentre of the country's 17th Ebola outbreak but the trip has been pushed back by a day.
The DRC, a vast nation of more than 100 million people, is one of the poorest countries in the world and for more than three decades has been plagued by conflict from myriad armed groups in its mineral-rich east.
There have been at least 1,077 suspected cases of Ebola since the outbreak was declared on May 15, including 246 deaths, the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) said on Thursday.
But the true reach of the outbreak, which is thought to have been circulating before it was detected, is likely to be much wider, the WHO has warned.
The DRC has limited capacity to conduct laboratory tests to confirm the transmission of cases.
The virus is already present in three provinces and in neighbouring Uganda, where seven confirmed infections, including one death, have been recorded.
"That thing can be stopped," Tedros said on his arrival on Thursday after assuring the Congolese people earlier in a message on X: "I want you to know that you are not alone."
On Friday, the WHO announced that on Wednesday a patient had recovered, left the hospital and was discharged into the community after two negative tests.
WHO's Anais Legand told reporters in Geneva it marked the "first" among patients who had been confirmed to have Ebola in the current outbreak.
Ebola, which is passed on through close contact and bodily fluids, has killed more than 15,000 people in Africa over the past 50 years.
The deadliest outbreak in the DRC claimed nearly 2,300 lives out of 3,500 cases between 2018 and 2020.
Congolese Health Minister Samuel Roger Kamba said late on Thursday that 105 people were currently in treatment centres.
"We need to put the alarmist outcries into perspective," he told reporters in Bunia, the Ituri provincial capital.
"We're not in the situation that people think we are in internationally," he said, adding: "We cannot be told that the epidemic is out of control."
- 'Packed like sardines' -
State services are largely lacking in Ituri province, where access is hindered by insecurity due to the presence of Islamic State-affiliated ADF militants and other community-based militias that regularly kill civilians.
The nearby eastern provinces of North Kivu and South Kivu have also seen Ebola cases in the latest outbreak and have been plagued by near continuous violence for three decades.
Swathes of the two regions are under the control of the Rwanda-backed anti-government armed group M23, which re-emerged in late 2021 but stepped up its campaign early last year.
Millions of people have fled the fighting and are living cheek-by-jowl in displacement camps, under tarps and tents and with poor hygiene conditions.
Nearly a million of those displaced are in Ituri province, where the prospect of the epidemic spreading throughout the camps has sparked alarm.
"If Ebola comes, we'll be wiped out as we're packed like sardines," Dorcas Mapenzi said at the Kingonze camp on the outskirts of Bunia.
Deborah Nzale, a widow and head of her family, lives with nine people in a small tarpaulin shelter of barely three square metres (32 square feet).
"We sleep piled on top of each other, with everyone's sweat," Nzale said.
"If a single person gets infected here in this camp, everyone will die."
No vaccine or specific treatment exists for the Bundibugyo strain of Ebola, which is behind the current outbreak.
But the head of the CDC Africa said on Thursday that a vaccine should be ready by the end of the year.
Uganda and Rwanda have closed their borders with the DRC and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio vowed this week to keep Ebola out of the United States.
E.Hall--AT