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Africa CDC says funding needs for Ebola response three times higher at $1.4 billion

By Thomson Reuters Jun 25, 2026 | 8:52 AM

By Anait Miridzhanian and Sfundo Parakozov

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.

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.

(Reporting by Anait Miridzhanian and Sfundo Parakozov; Editing by Bate Felix, Alexander Winning ​and Bill Berkrot)