A man walks through a temperature checkpoint, after Uganda closed its borders with the Democratic Republic of Congo, as authorities intensify efforts to contain a new Ebola outbreak caused by the Bundibugyo virus strain, at the Mpondwe border post, in Kasese district, Uganda, May 28, 2026. REUTERS/Abubaker Lubowa

DAKAR/JOHANNESBURG, June 25 (Reuters) – Africa’s top public health agency said on Thursday that funding needed to tackle the continent’s Ebola outbreak was three times higher than an earlier estimate, and now stands at $1.4 billion

Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention Director-General Jean Kaseya said the new estimate was based on discussions with experts from Congo’s government and United Nations agencies

The outbreak of the rare Bundibugyo strain of Ebola has infected over 1,100 people in Congo and 20 in neighbouring Uganda, reaching the highest first-month total of any episode of the disease

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Unlike the earlier funding needs estimate of $518 million, given on June 5 as part of a joint plan with the World Health Organization, the new figure includes money needed for humanitarian relief measures

Kaseya said that so far there had been about $910 million in funding pledges, but that only 13% of that had been released

“If we don’t have this $1.4 billion and if we don’t resolve the humanitarian issue, we will not stop this outbreak,” he told an online press conference

Humanitarian conditions are worsening in Congo’s Ituri province, the epicentre of the outbreak, Kaseya said

Another worry is that it is difficult for health workers to access displacement camps where there are Ebola cases, complicating contact-tracing, he added

On Wednesday, WHO officials said Congo’s Ebola outbreak was still outpacing response efforts. They flagged the risks to health workers operating in a region scarred by decades of war where local people are often deeply distrustful of officials and outsiders

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