Image 01 Image 03

Burial Team Attacked and 11 Infected Patients Flee Isolation Facility as Ebola Spreads in Africa

Burial Team Attacked and 11 Infected Patients Flee Isolation Facility as Ebola Spreads in Africa

Meanwhile, cruisers being isolated after hantavirus exposures return home and the first Clade 1 monkeypox case is reported in Connecticut.

There have been some intriguing developments in several infectious disease stories recently covered at Legal Insurrection.

In terms of the current Ebola outbreak, there are roughly 1,000+ suspected and confirmed cases and around 230–240 deaths across the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Uganda involving the Bundibugyo strain, with transmission still not fully contained.

As a reminder, the Bundibugyo strain has more than 30% genetic divergence from other orthoebolaviruses, including Zaire. This means that the vaccines and monoclonal therapies that have been developed to battle this hemorrhagic disease do not work, which is complicating efforts to contain this outbreak.

Another challenge is the community in which the outbreak is occurring. A burial team transporting the bodies of deceased Ebola patients was attacked en route. Meanwhile, 11 Ebola patients fled isolation.

A burial team was attacked and 11 Ebola patients fled isolation facilities in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, as the outbreak spread to another health zone in the country’s hardest-hit province.

A team attempting to safely bury an Ebola victim was assaulted in the South Kivu town of Katana, forcing workers to abandon the coffin and allowing community members to handle the body, an incident health officials warned could spark new chains of transmission.

Meanwhile, patients escaped isolation facilities in the epicenter Ituri, while security remained unstable in parts of the province where armed groups continue to limit humanitarian access. Rimba became the 17th affected health zone in Ituri — and the 25th nationally — according to a situation report published Wednesday.

“The geographic expansion toward Rimba demonstrates active community transmission,” the report said.

Interestingly, Ebola has made its way to the region of the DRC controlled by Islamic State militants.

A rare strain of Ebola has reached a corner of the Democratic Republic of Congo controlled by Islamic State militants, a place too dangerous for health workers fighting to stop the deadly virus.

The Bundibugyo strain has killed one person in the militant-controlled territory of Mambasa, which is some 100 miles from the outbreak’s epicenter in a gold-mining town of Mongbwalu. Mambasa is the stronghold of the Allied Democratic Forces, an Islamic State affiliate conducting an insurgency against Congolese and Ugandan troops.

Meanwhile, the furor over hantavirus has appeared to have tapered off dramatically. Those exposed to the virus on the Dutch cruise ship are quietly leaving federal quarantine centers to isolate at home.

Several Americans who were exposed to a rare strain of hantavirus on board a cruise ship this spring have returned home to finish the second half of their mandatory six-week quarantine.

Five passengers have been released from the National Quarantine Unit, which is overseen by the University of Nebraska Medical Center. Thirteen others remain in the unit, although some will leave in the coming weeks to complete their monitoring at home, according to a statement from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“These people remain symptom-free and have met the criteria established by public health officials to safely continue monitoring at home,” the CDC said Monday.

Finally, Connecticut health officials recently reported the state’s its first positive case of the more virulent and transmissible clade I monkeypox.

A resident who recently traveled to Western Europe tested positive for the variant, the Connecticut Department of Public Health said.

According to the DPH, the case was tested and confirmed at the State Public Health Laboratory in Rocky Hill. Officials have not said where the person who tested positive lives.

The DPH noted that there are two types of the Mpox virus: clade I and clade II.

Clade II has been spreading in the U.S. since a large outbreak in 2022. Clade I has mainly caused outbreaks in central and eastern Africa and has recently been found in Western Europe.

“The difference between the two of them is clad I sometimes can cause more severe disease,” said Dr. Paul Anthony, assistant director of infectious diseases, Hartford Hospital.

There was a time when it felt like a shot of penicillin and a splash of iodine could handle just about anything — an era when modern medicine seemed firmly in charge.

Now, we’re watching a vaccine-resistant Ebola strain spread through conflict zones where containment breaks down at gunpoint, while monkeypox evolves and hantavirus quietly fades from the headlines after intense media focus.

It’s a stark reminder that the age of easy medical fixes seems to be long gone, despite credentialed “experts” and billions spent on research and public health bureaucracy.

DONATE

Donations tax deductible
to the full extent allowed by law.

Comments


 
 0 
 
 5
henrybowman | June 4, 2026 at 1:06 pm

But thank heavens for small favors — Uganda seems entirely bereft of AWFLs ready to REEEEE at a moment’s notice about the virus having been named after a specific locality, which is RAYCISS against Bundibugyo-polites.


 
 0 
 
 6
Dimsdale | June 4, 2026 at 1:12 pm

Lime pits are greatly underrated.


 
 0 
 
 3
MAJack | June 4, 2026 at 1:25 pm

Primitives on display.


 
 0 
 
 1
DaveGinOly | June 4, 2026 at 1:32 pm

In the subhead, “Cade” should be “Clade.”


 
 0 
 
 3
DaveGinOly | June 4, 2026 at 1:40 pm

In days of yore, disease outbreaks in places like Africa would occur and burn out before the world heard of them. Infected persons would die en route to any place more than a week away. Infection transmission would also burn out on conveyances like ocean liners, taking people to even more distant places. We are cursed by connectivity (we learn of outbreaks in real time, making the threats seem immediate) and the ability to travel to the far side of the planet in under 24 hours (making some threats immediate in fact).


 
 0 
 
 0
Aarradin | June 4, 2026 at 2:20 pm

“Think about how stupid the average person is, and then realize that half the population is even dumber than that”, George Carlin

And that was said when our average IQ in the US was still at about 100, before mass migration brought it below 90.

Now, imagine living in a country where the average IQ is 60. Where the “geniuses” are dumber than a Patty Murray or Cory Booker.


 
 0 
 
 0
IneedAhaircut | June 4, 2026 at 3:53 pm

Governments and NGOs have spent decades battling Ebola in Africa. At some point should we just throw in the towel and let it burn itself out? Ban all travel to/from the region and be done with it.


     
     0 
     
     1
    CommoChief in reply to IneedAhaircut. | June 4, 2026 at 4:17 pm

    To be sure we’d need to ban indirect travel as well. So if someone flew to Paris from the Congo you’d need to ban all French travelers ….plus all travel from Nations that still allowed travel from France…and on and on.


 
 0 
 
 0
gonzotx | June 4, 2026 at 6:48 pm

where the average IQ is 60.

Ahh
That’s actual full retard
More like 70-75


 
 0 
 
 1
amatuerwrangler | June 4, 2026 at 7:06 pm

Oh good! Multiple options for a “medical crisis” just in time for the US election season…. So far it looks like Hantavirus is loosing steam, but Ebola, a perennial favorite, still has a chance. Can you get Ebola from the bats at the wet market?

This could be an example of “God moves in mysterious ways” —
“A rare strain of Ebola has reached a corner of the Democratic Republic of Congo controlled by Islamic State militants, a place too dangerous for health workers fighting to stop the deadly virus.” Let ‘er run….


 
 0 
 
 0
Demonized | June 4, 2026 at 10:29 pm

It’s Africa. Make me care.

Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.