Police fire shots in air to disperse angry crowds at DR Congo Ebola treatment centre

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Emery Makumeno,BBC Africa, Kinshasaand

Hafsa Khalil

Reuters Five Red Cross workers in full PPE - white suits and green rubber gloves - walking in a straight line while the one in front is carrying a canister on their back and spraying disinfectant on the ground. They are outside Mongwalu General Hospital and two people are watching them.Reuters

Red Cross volunteers are conducting safe burials for Ebola victims to prevent the virus from spreading

Police in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo fired shots in the air after angry crowds attempted to reclaim the bodies of loved ones who had died at an Ebola treatment centre in Mongwalu, two local journalists told the BBC.

Sunday's unrest continued throughout the day, the reporters said.

The treatment centre, in a hospital compound, was the same place that was targeted overnight on Friday into Saturday, when an isolation tent was set ablaze.

The body of a dead Ebola victim is highly infectious and can lead to the virus spreading further when prepared for burial.

There have been more than 900 suspected Ebola cases in the current outbreak and 220 suspected deaths, officials say.

According to Mongwalu General Hospital's medical director Dr Richard Lokudu, Sunday's attackers demanded the bodies of two people be given to their families.

One of the dead was a Catholic shepherd, who was a "well-known local figure - a religious leader", a hospital official told AFP news agency.

Suspicion of the authorities and scepticism about the cause of death has led to deep distrust among some in the communities currently affected by Ebola.

Red Cross volunteers are carrying out safe burials under police protection to stop the virus spreading.

This comes as heath ministers from DR Congo and neighbouring Uganda and South Sudan over the weekend finalised their cross-border co-ordination in response to the outbreak, alongside the head of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC).

Map of eastern DR Congo and Uganda showing areas affected by an Ebola outbreak. Shaded red regions mark locations with reported cases, concentrated in Ituri province, including Mongwalu, Rwampara, Nyakunde, and nearby Bunia, identified as the site of the first suspected case. Additional smaller affected areas are shown around Butembo, Goma near the Rwanda border, and a location near Kampala in Uganda, where cases were confirmed in travellers from DR Congo. A locator inset highlights the region within Africa.

On Monday, Uganda confirmed two new cases, both health workers, bringing its total infections to seven, with one death being recorded. The patients are receiving treatment and people they have been in contact with are being traced, the health ministry said.

Africa CDC warned that other countries on the continent - namely Angola, Burundi, the Central African Republic, Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda, South Sudan, Tanzania and Zambia - are at risk from an outbreak.

The agency's director-general Dr Jean Kaseya said he is holding a meeting on Monday for "all African leaders" to share guidance.

Speaking to BBC World Service's Newsday, he said their plan looks at how to avoid waste, how to isolate and manage cases, and how to ensure people have "dignified funerals".

Kaseya also said DR Congo, Uganda and South Sudan, agreed on a $319m (£236m) budget to stop the outbreak from spreading.

On where the money will come from, Kaseya said, so far, 10% had been secured by the affected countries.

On Monday, South Africa's President Cyril Ramaphosa pledged an initial $5m as an act of solidarity.

"This contribution is a demonstration of our confidence in Africa CDC as the public health agency of our continent," he said during a briefing on the outbreak, as he encouraged other African states to join efforts.

"Africa is no longer waiting passively for others to act and to come to its assistance, waiting helplessly," he explained.

Calling on the international community to also support the plan, Ramaphosa said: "The world is safer when Africa is safer. Delayed response and support today will result in much higher human social and economic costs tomorrow."

Kaseya said that African businessmen would be meeting in Lagos on 29 May to "raise additional funds", while international partners such as the US, UK, European Union and World Bank are also "committing funds".

Ten days into the declaration of an outbreak, World Health Organization (WHO) chief Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said responders are "playing catch-up" after the initial delay in detecting cases.

Africa CDC declared an Ebola outbreak in DR Congo's Ituri province on 15 May. It is the country's 17th Ebola outbreak.

"We are urgently scaling up operations, but at the moment the epidemic is outpacing us," Tedros said on Monday, adding that he will be travelling to DR Congo the following day.

The outbreak is caused by the rare Bundibugyo species of Ebola, which had not been seen for over a decade.

There are currently no vaccines or medications that target Bundibugyo, which makes it harder to treat.

Last week, the WHO said it could take up to nine months for a vaccine to be ready.

Along with Ituri, cases have been detected in DR Congo's North and South Kivu provinces, which border Rwanda.

Parts of the two eastern areas are under the control of rebel group M23, whose clashes with government forces have brought additional difficulties in dealing with the virus.

Getty Images/BBC A woman looking at her mobile phone and the graphic BBC News AfricaGetty Images/BBC

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