Écrit par WHO			
				
			|	
						
				22 Juillet 2019			
			
				
		
				
				
		15 July 2019 Joint News Release Geneva - Almost a year after the outbreak of Ebola was declared in eastern  Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and with the number of new cases  at worrying levels, the United Nations hosted a high-level meeting today  in Geneva to take stock of the coordinated response and galvanize  further support for the government-led effort to defeat the deadly  disease.
Yesterday, 14 July, the first case of Ebola was confirmed in Goma, a  city of about 1 million people south of the outbreak’s epicenter. Almost  3,000 health workers have so far been vaccinated against the disease in  Goma. More than 1,650 people have died in the current outbreak, while  about 12 new cases are reported every day.
With the outbreak still confined to the provinces of North Kivu and  Ituri, the response is at a critical juncture. WHO assesses the risk of  spread to neighbouring provinces and countries as very high.
Chaired by the WHO Director-General, Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus,  and UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency  Relief Coordinator Mark Lowcock, today’s event included the DRC Minister  of Health, Dr. Oly Ilunga, the Minister for Solidarity and Humanitarian  Action, Mr. Bernard Biando Sango, and the Secretary of State for  International Development of the United Kingdom, the Rt. Hon. Rory  Stewart, as keynote speakers.
“The tenth outbreak of Ebola is a public health crisis taking place in  an environment characterized by development challenges and deficiencies  in the health system,” said Dr. Ilunga.
“The Government acknowledges how difficult it has been to get ahead of  this outbreak of Ebola in our country. The response is being carried  out in a very complex environment, but with support from our friends in  the international community, the Congolese are committed to bringing  down the number of cases to zero,” said Mr. Biando Sango.
“Together with the government, we can and will end this outbreak. We  have better public health tools than ever to respond to Ebola, including  an effective vaccine,” said Dr. Tedros. “But we need to see an end to  the attacks and other disruptions to the response.”
Since January, there have been 198 attacks against the health response  that have resulted in 7 deaths and left 58 healthcare workers and  patients injured. “We need political support from all parties, and  community ownership, for the responders to do their work safely and  without interruptions. This is the only way to stop the virus from  continuing to spread.”
Dr. Tedros also announced that he will reconvene the Emergency  Committee as soon as possible to assess the latest development and  advise him accordingly.
The areas of Ituri and North Kivu provinces affected by Ebola are  characterised by poor infrastructure, political instability and ongoing  conflict involving scores of armed militia groups and community mistrust  of national authorities and outsiders.
In May, the UN Secretary-General and the inter-agency humanitarian  system bolstered joint UN action. This included the appointment of a UN  Ebola Emergency Response Coordinator (UN EERC), Mr. David Gressly, who  is based in the affected areas to ensure an enabling environment for the  public health response, including appropriate security, logistics,  political and community engagement, and action to address the concerns  of affected communities.
“Today, donors and responders expressed confidence in the approach we  are now taking,” said Mr. Lowcock. “Unless we get substantially more  financial resources immediately, it will not be possible to end the  outbreak. Every delay gives the virus an opportunity to spread, which  has disastrous consequences. We need to do everything possible now to  avoid reaching the scale of the outbreak we saw in West Africa five  years ago when more than 10,000 lives were lost before a  multi-billion-dollar response brought the cases down to zero.”
Speaking on the role of the international community, Rt. Hon. Rory  Stewart, said: “We are on the edge with this crisis. My visit to eastern  DRC this month only reinforced my view about just how urgent our  response to this crisis must be. This is very, very real. We are  essentially chasing Ebola – one of the world’s most deadly diseases –  around an area overrun by armed groups. We need the international  community to step up and stop this outbreak from escalating. There is a  real danger that, if we lose control of it, this disease could spread  beyond DRC’s borders to the wider region.”
UN EERC Gressly, WHO’s Assistant Director-General for Emergency  Response, Dr. Ibrahima Socé Fall, and the president of the DRC Ebola  Survivors’ Association, Dr. Maurice Kakule joined the event from eastern  DRC via video-conference. Ms. Annette Dixon, World Bank Group Vice  President for Human Development, also participated via video-conference  from Washington DC.
“We need to substantially improve our readiness and surveillance  mechanisms so that we are getting ahead of the virus instead of chasing  the virus. There is no room for complacency. It is not over until the  transmission is broken in all affected areas,” UN EERC Gressly said from  Goma.
UNICEF Deputy Executive Director Dr. Omar  Abdi spoke about community engagement, and the Secretary General of the  International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies,  Mr. Elhadj As Sy, spoke on preparedness in the DRC and in neighbouring  countries. Dr Matshidiso Moeti, WHO Regional Director for Africa, also  addressed preparedness. A representative from Medair, Dr. Trina  Helderman, discussed the critical role that NGOs are playing in the  response.