作者: admin

  • France reiterates support for Guyana in border dispute with Venezuela

    France reiterates support for Guyana in border dispute with Venezuela

    GEORGETOWN, Guyana – As the South American nation marked its 60th year of independence from British rule, French President Emmanuel Macron delivered a clear message of solidarity to Guyana, reinforcing Paris’ commitment to the country’s territorial integrity amid the long-running border controversy with Venezuela over the resource-rich Essequibo region.

    In a formal congratulatory letter addressed to Guyanese President Irfaan Ali, Macron extended warm wishes to the Government and people of Guyana, while highlighting the deepening strategic partnership between the two countries that share core interests in addressing common regional challenges across the Guyana Shield.

    “France is particularly attached to its partnership with Guyana in light of the many regional challenges we share on the Guyana Shield, where we work together in support of peace, cooperation and respect for human rights,” Macron wrote in the correspondence.

    Turning directly to the high-stakes territorial dispute currently awaiting a final ruling from the International Court of Justice (ICJ), Macron made clear that France stands firmly behind the principles of international law, and remains fully committed to upholding Guyana’s sovereignty and established territorial borders.

    The decades-long dispute centers on the Essequibo, a vast 159,500-square-kilometer territory that makes up nearly two-thirds of Guyana’s total land area. The region holds massive untapped reserves of minerals and crude oil, making it a strategically and economically critical asset for Guyana. For decades, Venezuela has laid claim to the entire territory, rejecting the 1899 Arbitral Award that first formalized the border between the two neighboring nations. Though Venezuela accepted the ruling for generations, it formally declared the award invalid in 1962 and has repeatedly reasserted its territorial claim in the years since.

    The process toward a peaceful resolution is being guided by the terms of the 1966 Geneva Agreement, which outlines diplomatic mechanisms to settle the conflict. After years of unproductive bilateral talks failed to bridge the divide between the two countries, the United Nations Secretary-General formally referred the dispute to the ICJ for a binding ruling in 2018, when Guyana petitioned the court to confirm the ongoing legal validity of the 1899 border award.

    The ICJ has already confirmed that it holds jurisdiction over the case. Earlier this month, both parties concluded their formal submissions, including filing written memorials and completing oral hearings before the court, leaving the ICJ poised to issue its final ruling in the coming months.

    Beyond the border dispute, Macron also noted that bilateral relations between France and Guyana received a significant boost last September, when France opened a permanent embassy in Georgetown, Guyana’s capital. Looking ahead to deeper collaboration, Macron expressed optimism that ongoing negotiations for new bilateral agreements across key sectors including justice, internal security, and national defense would be finalized in the near future, opening a new chapter of cooperation between the two nations.

  • Veteran journalist Opal Roach replaces Clint Watson at ZNS

    Veteran journalist Opal Roach replaces Clint Watson at ZNS

    Long-serving Bahamian broadcast journalist Opal Roach has stepped into the role of acting general manager at the Broadcasting Corporation of The Bahamas (BCB), the operator of state-owned ZNS Broadcasting, following the departure of former chief Clint Watson who moved into frontline politics. The official announcement of Roach’s appointment was made public on Wednesday, marking a promotion for an executive who has spent decades in senior leadership and news roles within the public broadcaster.

    Roach’s career at BCB has covered multiple high-level positions, including a prior stint as assistant general manager for the news division, and most recently, deputy general manager of the entire corporation. Her ascent to the top role comes after Watson, who led the taxpayer-funded media outlet for almost three years, was sworn in as a government senator earlier this month, triggering his exit from the broadcaster.

    Watson first joined ZNS as general manager in 2023, leaving his position as press secretary in the Office of the Prime Minister to take the media role. Almost immediately after he began exploring a political candidacy, controversy erupted over his dual holding of political ambition and leadership of the state broadcaster. Last August, Free National Movement (FNM) Chairman Dr. Duane Sands publicly called for Watson to resign from his ZNS post, arguing that it was impossible for the head of the national public broadcaster to seek a governing party nomination without eroding public trust in ZNS’s editorial and operational impartiality.

    In response to the criticism, Watson stated that he would step down from his role at ZNS if he was selected as the Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) candidate for a constituency. Ultimately, however, the PLP chose Obie Roberts as its candidate for the Southern Shores seat, leaving Watson unsuccessful in his nomination bid. But the debate over his right to remain as ZNS general manager did not fade after the nomination process.

    Tensions boiled over in April, when two sitting BCB board members resigned in protest over what they called overt political interference in the corporation’s governance. The board had previously issued a directive barring Watson from returning to work at ZNS until after the general election scheduled for May 12, a decision that was later overturned by external political pressure. The board’s original decision extended Watson’s administrative leave until May 18, or a further date determined by the board’s leadership, following his failed nomination attempt. In a formal letter from BCB Executive Chairman Picewell Forbes, the board explained the leave was ordered to protect transparency and uphold public confidence in the corporation’s operations and impartial leadership.

    However, internal correspondence obtained by The Tribune shows that Prime Minister Philip “Brave” Davis directly instructed that Watson be allowed to return to his general manager role immediately, overriding the independent board’s formal decision. That interference prompted the two resignations and set in motion the final process that led to Watson’s swearing in as a senator and departure from ZNS, clearing the way for Roach’s appointment to the top post.

  • Daylight ambush leaves man dead and woman injured

    Daylight ambush leaves man dead and woman injured

    A brazen broad-daylight shooting in the residential neighborhood of Elizabeth Estates has claimed the life of a man in his early 20s and left a 30-something woman injured, marking the 27th murder recorded in the nation this year. As law enforcement worked to process the chaotic crime scene on Thursday, grief-stricken family members clashed with police barriers, their anguished reactions laying bare the human cost of the rising violence.

    The most heart-wrenching scene unfolded near the yellow police tape, where the victim’s sobbing sister repeatedly tried to push past officers to reach her dead brother. Multiple times, police had to gently hold her back, before Chief Superintendent Sheria King, the department’s public information liaison, stepped in to offer personal comfort to the inconsolable woman.

    According to initial police accounts, emergency dispatch received multiple reports of gunfire shortly before 3 p.m., with calls pinpointing the attack near the intersection of Antigua Street and Barbados Avenue. Preliminary probe findings show the young male victim had just pulled up near his home when a pale-colored Japanese-made vehicle entered the block. Multiple occupants exited the vehicle, drew concealed handguns, and immediately opened fire on the victim, police confirmed.

    Despite sustaining multiple gunshot wounds, the victim attempted to escape the ambush by driving away, only to lose control of his vehicle and crash into a nearby residential property a short distance from the original shooting site. He was pronounced dead at the crash site by responding first responders. A female passenger in his vehicle, believed to be in her early 30s, suffered non-fatal gunshot wounds to her upper body and was rushed to a local hospital for urgent medical care. As of Thursday evening, her condition has not been updated by authorities.

    Investigators have not yet confirmed how many attackers took part in the coordinated ambush. King told reporters that the investigation team is currently canvassing the entire neighborhood to locate private and public CCTV cameras that could capture footage of the vehicle and attackers, but no concrete details on the number of suspects have been confirmed.

    When pressed by reporters on whether the victim had a prior criminal record, King confirmed that he was wearing an electronic monitoring ankle bracelet tied to a previous serious criminal offense, but declined to share further details on the nature of the offense. She also could not confirm whether the victim had recently been released from correctional custody ahead of the attack.

    As the active investigation continues, the Royal Bahamas Police Force has issued a public appeal for any witnesses or residents with information about the shooting, the vehicle used in the attack, or the suspects to contact confidential tip lines or local detective units to assist with the case.

  • BPSU members demand answers over alleged financial mismanagement

    BPSU members demand answers over alleged financial mismanagement

    On Thursday, disgruntled members of the Bahamas Public Services Union (BPSU) based in Grand Bahama staged a public protest outside the union’s Freeport headquarters, delivering a seven-day ultimatum to BPSU President Kimsley Ferguson to address a cascade of allegations ranging from financial mismanagement to deliberate violations of the union’s constitution.

    Dozens of demonstrators assembled outside the BPSU Building just after midday, chanting slogans calling for Ferguson’s ouster as they laid out a series of long-simmering grievances that have split the union’s leadership. Core among the complaints are claims that Ferguson has failed to publish required biannual financial reports stretching all the way back to 2019, left thousands of dollars in mandatory National Insurance Board (NIB) contributions unpaid, and allowed the union’s key properties in both Grand Bahama and New Providence to operate without active insurance coverage.

    Latoya Cartwright-Jones, BPSU’s Northern Region Area Vice President, told reporters that Ferguson has stonewalled repeated requests from elected executive board members for months, refusing to initiate consultations or open lines of communication about the mounting concerns. Rank-and-file members and leadership alike are demanding full access to financial records that detail how union dues and funds have been allocated, clarity on why NIB payments remain outstanding years after they were due, and an explanation for the lapsed insurance coverage on union-owned buildings.

    “We are not making baseless accusations,” Cartwright-Jones explained. “We are simply asking him to produce receipts for every expenditure, to account for why NIB payments have not been made, and to explain why our properties still do not have insurance coverage. When we raise concerns about misappropriation, we are referring directly to the failure to direct union funds to the mandatory and necessary purposes they were allocated for.”

    According to Cartwright-Jones, the seven-day deadline is set under BPSU’s own governing constitution. If Ferguson fails to provide satisfactory responses within the timeframe, she said, the union will move forward with formal disciplinary measures that could include suspension via a general membership vote, removal from office, and mandatory accountability processes for the alleged violations. She also issued a formal call for the Bahamas Ministry of Labour to intervene in the dispute, noting that independent audits of union finances have been pending since 2019.

    Anton Michael King, a shop steward representing the Gaming Board, amplified the allegations, claiming that tens of thousands of dollars in employee contributions earmarked for NIB are unaccounted for. He also questioned why the union’s democratically elected treasurer has been blocked from accessing BPSU’s financial records and official bank accounts for multiple years, a direct violation of the union’s standard governance protocols.

    King added another serious allegation: that Ferguson failed to renew insurance coverage on union properties even after receiving and depositing an insurance payout for damage to BPSU buildings caused by Hurricane Dorian. “You took the entire insurance check to Nassau,” King said, directly referencing the president’s actions.

    Additional shop stewards representing three major government departments echoed these concerns. Taronya Wildgoose of Social Services, Eric Bastian of the Department of Agriculture and Marine Resources, and Athony Francis of the Post Office all outlined their own grievances, including that gas pumps purchased with union funds remain non-operational years after acquisition, that vehicles approved for purchase by the general membership years ago have never been acquired, and that multiple board appointments have been made without the required approval of the BPSU executive board.

    “Our members have a fundamental right to answers, to full transparency, and to demand that the union’s constitution is respected at all times,” Bastian said.

    The demonstration drew support from leaders of other major Bahamian trade unions, including Bahamas Nurses Union Vice President William Bartlett and Charlice Ellis of the Bahamas Communications and Public Officers Union, both of whom were in attendance to stand with protesting BPSU members.

    As of press time, multiple attempts by The Tribune to reach Ferguson for comment on the allegations, including phone calls and written messages, have gone unanswered.

  • Escaped murder suspect caught after eight months on the run

    Escaped murder suspect caught after eight months on the run

    After nearly eight months evading law enforcement, a murder suspect who dramatically escaped court custody has finally been taken back into police custody, closing one of the most high-profile manhunts in recent memory. The capture of D’Angelo Culmer on Thursday also pulled a second local man into legal trouble, who now faces accusations of helping the fugitive avoid detection, alongside additional drug-related charges uncovered during the arrest operation.

    The takedown was carried out by elite law enforcement units: officers from the Internal Security Division, the national police department’s SWAT team, intercepted a grey Nissan Note at the intersection of Tonique Williams-Darling Highway and Premiers Avenue shortly before noon Thursday. Inside the vehicle, Culmer was located alongside a 44-year-old local man, and a subsequent search of the car and both occupants yielded a significant drug seizure: one pound and eight ounces of suspected marijuana, stored in a black backpack. Police estimate the seized narcotics has a street value of approximately $3,200.

    Both men were immediately taken into custody and formally cautioned in connection with the alleged drug possession offense. Beyond the drug charges, the 44-year-old also faces an additional accusation of harbouring a fugitive for aiding Culmer during his months on the run.

    Culmer’s escape originally unfolded on October 2, 2025, when he fled from the Nassau Street Court Complex on South Street around 3:30 p.m. At the time of his escape, he was facing serious criminal charges: one count of murder and two counts of attempted murder connected to a January 31, 2024, shooting incident. Prosecutors allege that Culmer opened fire on a group of people from a moving vehicle on Ragged Island Street that day, leaving 39-year-old Rudiska Bethel dead and two other victims, Carla Bain and Lorenzo Sands, with non-fatal injuries. Culmer had first been arraigned on these charges at the Magistrate’s Court on February 16, 2024.

    Culmer’s escape triggered immediate public scrutiny of security protocols at the court complex, prompting an internal investigation into how a high-risk murder suspect was able to slip away from custody. Just one month after the escape, in November 2025, Police Commissioner Shanta Knowles confirmed that three serving police officers had been placed under investigation over the security breach. Commissioner Knowles also announced at that time that existing security measures at the court complex had already been upgraded to prevent similar incidents from occurring in the future.

    By January 2026, Commissioner Knowles confirmed that the three officers had been referred to an internal police tribunal to face disciplinary proceedings over Culmer’s escape. As of that update, one officer had already been placed on interdiction, and a second was expected to receive the same disciplinary action as the tribunal process moved forward. The current status of these internal disciplinary proceedings has not been updated publicly as of Culmer’s recapture.

  • Halkitis denies Gardiner hired him

    Halkitis denies Gardiner hired him

    Bahamas’ top finance official is facing growing political pressure to step down after reversing his earlier denial and confirming he once held a directorship at a construction firm tied to a drug trafficking suspect linked to a fatal Election Day plane crash off Florida’s coast.

    Finance Minister Michael Halkitis made the admission during an official press briefing hosted by the Office of the Prime Minister, just one day after he told local newspaper The Tribune he had never been involved with Top Notch Builders. The scandal unfolds against a backdrop of sustained public and political silence surrounding new details of the May 2017 plane crash, as well as intensifying scrutiny over claims laid out in a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration affidavit that connect sitting Bahamian government officials to individuals facing drug trafficking charges.

    Public records from the Bahamas’ official corporate registry tie Top Notch Builders to Eric Gardiner, the crash victim who has since been arrested and formally charged with drug offenses by U.S. law enforcement. As of Thursday evening, two major political opposition groups — the Free National Movement (FNM) and the Coalition of Independents — have both publicly called for Halkitis’ immediate resignation following his confession.

    Halkitis pushed back against accusations of wrongdoing during the briefing, framing his past involvement with the firm as routine professional work. “As a private citizen I was involved in financial consulting and corporate services consulting,” he explained. “I was approached to provide consulting and directorship services to Top Notch Builders, in particular setting up proper corporate governance procedures and structures.”

    The finance minister clarified that he was not recruited to the role by Gardiner directly, but was instead approached by a third-party legal representative. He told reporters his association with the company began in mid-2019, and operations were suspended by April 2020 as global COVID-19 pandemic restrictions shut down construction projects across the country. “I resigned as director of that company and all the other directorships that I held in 2021,” he added, noting that full corporate records held by the Registrar General’s Department would confirm his account of the firm’s ownership and leadership structure.

    “Anybody who’s interested in the complete story can get the complete set of documents which not only show who the directors are but who the shareholders are, who the owners of the company were at the time, and they would see that it’s not who some people say it was,” Halkitis said.

    Halkitis’ political career stretches back more than a decade: he served as Minister of State for Finance under the previous Christie administration from 2012 to 2017, and was sworn in as Finance Minister and Leader of Government Business in the Senate following the Progressive Liberal Party’s 2021 general election victory.

    Top Notch Builders first gained public attention in 2017, when it secured a lucrative $35 million government contract to build the Eight Mile Rock administrative complex just one day before that year’s general election. Corporate filings further show the firm owns Complete Construction, the developer behind the government’s high-profile Carmichael Village affordable housing project, a flagship initiative launched during the last parliamentary term.

    In a 2017 sworn statement, Gardiner testified that he held no ownership stake in Top Notch Builders despite serving as the firm’s president and director. He claimed the company is 100 percent owned by Paradise Productions Inc, an entity fully controlled by Samson Hield, who has previously been named as the lead contractor for the Eight Mile Rock public-private partnership project in local business reporting. At this time, no wrongdoing has been alleged against any other current or former officer or director of Top Notch Builders or Complete Construction, and no evidence has been presented linking the firms to Gardiner’s alleged drug trafficking activities.

    When The Tribune first questioned Halkitis about his ties to the company on the floor of the House of Assembly Wednesday, he denied any formal involvement. “Never a president of the company, and I think he (Eric Gardiner) was the president of the company or someone else was the president of the company. I was never employed by the company,” he told reporters at the time. When pressed about how Gardiner, a convicted drug trafficker, was able to secure large-scale government contracts, Halkitis declined to comment, saying “I don’t want to comment on that.”

    Opposition leader Michael Pintard, head of the FNM, has accused Halkitis of intentionally misleading the Bahamian public about the depth of his involvement with Top Notch Builders. Pintard argued that Halkitis did not serve as a minor consultant or outsider director, but actually held the role of company president — a position that would have put him at the center of the firm’s daily operations and corporate decision-making.

    Pintard further raised conflict of interest concerns, noting that Complete Construction secured tens of millions of dollars in government housing contracts after Halkitis joined the national Cabinet, and that Halkitis never publicly disclosed his past leadership role with the parent company or recused himself from related discussions. “This immediately places him in a direct conflict of interest position, especially in light of the fact that as a sitting Minister and then Senator, he never made the public aware of his role in that company and the steps he took to recuse himself from any consideration,” Pintard said. Closing his statement, the opposition leader reiterated the demand for Halkitis to step down: “Halkitis must go!”

  • Mesoplodon whale found dead on shore of Playa Grande

    Mesoplodon whale found dead on shore of Playa Grande

    A rare member of the Mesoplodon genus, a little-seen group of deep-dwelling beaked whales, has been found dead on the sands of Playa Grande, located in the Dominican Republic’s María Trinidad Sánchez Province. The unusual stranding has caught the attention of both local coastal communities and regional environmental regulators, as sightings of this elusive cetacean are extremely uncommon in nearshore waters of the area.

    Mesoplodon whales fall under the beaked whale group, part of the broader Ziphiidae cetacean family. Unlike many whale species that frequent continental shelf waters or coastal migration routes, these marine mammals are specially adapted to life in remote, open-ocean deep waters, thousands of meters below the surface. Their biology allows them to spend extended periods foraging at extreme depths, only breaking the surface for short, infrequent intervals to breathe. This deep-water lifestyle makes them one of the least observed large mammal groups on Earth, even though researchers currently recognize roughly 14 distinct Mesoplodon species, and the Ziphiidae family counts among the most widely distributed and numerically abundant whale groups in global oceans.

    Local environmental authorities confirmed that the stranding of this individual near Río San Juan’s coastline is an out-of-the-ordinary event. Mesoplodon whales almost never venture into shallow coastal waters unless disoriented, injured, or ill, so the presence of a deceased specimen on a popular local beach has raised questions among researchers and officials. At present, environmental teams are conducting a full investigation to pinpoint the exact cause of the whale’s death, and to determine what factors may have driven the animal to leave its preferred deep-water habitat and end up washed ashore.

  • Italian Embassy in Santo Domingo celebrates Republic Day

    Italian Embassy in Santo Domingo celebrates Republic Day

    Against the timeless backdrop of Santo Domingo’s Colonial City, a UNESCO-designated World Heritage Site, the Italian Embassy in the Dominican capital gathered a diverse, influential crowd this week to mark Italy’s annual Republic Day with a signature diplomatic reception. The venue, one of the Caribbean’s most iconic historic landmarks, set a fitting stage for a gathering centered on celebrating decades of shared connection between Rome and Santo Domingo, bringing together senior diplomatic envoys from across the region, top Dominican government officials, and members of both the Italian community resident in the Dominican Republic and Dominican communities with roots in bilateral exchange.

    In his keynote address to attendees, Italian Ambassador Sergio Maffettone opened by highlighting the multifaceted, long-running relationship that binds the two Mediterranean and Caribbean nations. He traced the connection back through generations, noting the deep historical and cultural overlaps that shape bilateral ties today, before turning to the outsized social contributions that Italian migrants and people of Italian descent have made to building modern Dominican society. Maffettone also emphasized the mutual nature of people-to-people connection: the Dominican community in Italy ranks among the largest foreign diaspora communities from the Caribbean in the European country, while a robust, active Italian population remains rooted in the Dominican Republic, sustaining cultural and economic exchange on the ground.

    Beyond people-to-people ties, Maffettone drew special attention to the rapidly expanding economic partnership between the two nations. He confirmed that Italian foreign direct investment (FDI) flowing into the Dominican Republic hit an all-time high of $371 million in 2025, marking a clear upward trajectory in commercial collaboration. He also welcomed a major new development in bilateral connectivity: ITA Airways’ recent announcement of a new direct air route linking Rome’s Fiumicino Airport to Santo Domingo’s Las Américas International Airport, scheduled to launch commercial operations in November 2026. The new route is expected to boost tourism, business travel, and people-to-people exchange between the two countries dramatically.

    Speaking on behalf of the Dominican government at the reception, Deputy Foreign Minister Francisco Caraballo echoed the ambassador’s positive assessment of bilateral relations. He commended the deep, decades-long friendship between the two countries and formally recognized Italy as a key strategic partner that has contributed substantially to the Dominican Republic’s ongoing social and economic development agenda.

  • Dominican Archbishop invites Pope Leo XIV to visit the Dominican Republic

    Dominican Archbishop invites Pope Leo XIV to visit the Dominican Republic

    Between May 22 and 28, Carlos Tomás Morel Diplán, Coadjutor Archbishop of Santo Domingo, carried out an official working visit to Vatican City, headlined by a closed-door private meeting with Pope Leo XIV in the Pontiff’s private office on May 25. This gathering marked the first official face-to-face meeting between the two church leaders since Morel received his appointment to the senior archdiocesan role.

    The half-hour conversation centered on two core topics: the current state of pastoral work and church operations across the Dominican Republic, and the key priorities of Morel’s ongoing leadership mission within the Dominican Catholic Church. Notably, the meeting aligned perfectly with the Vatican’s launch of *Magnifica Humanitas*, Pope Leo XIV’s debut encyclical. This landmark papal document tackles the pressing ethical and social questions raised by rapid artificial intelligence advancement, with a central focus on upholding and protecting fundamental human dignity in the fast-evolving digital technological age.

    As a key part of his packed Vatican schedule, Morel took part in multiple church-led gatherings and official events organized to coincide with the release of the new papal encyclical. During his private discussion with Pope Leo XIV, the archbishop also extended a formal invitation for the Pontiff to undertake an official visit to the Dominican Republic. Early reports indicate that Pope Leo XIV responded positively, sharing that he holds clear interest in traveling to the Caribbean nation at a future date.

    Morel’s week-long visit wrapped up with a series of additional working meetings that brought together senior Dominican diplomatic representatives and senior Catholic clergy based in Rome, including Víctor Valdemar Suárez Díaz, the Dominican Republic’s ambassador to the Holy See. Beyond his official diplomatic and ecclesial engagements, the archbishop also led Eucharistic services and gathered with Catholic community groups from the Dominican Republic based in Rome during his stay in the Italian capital.

  • WHO announces first confirmed Ebola recovery in DRC outbreak

    WHO announces first confirmed Ebola recovery in DRC outbreak

    GENEVA, Switzerland – In a small but notable breakthrough amid a growing Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the World Health Organization announced Friday the first laboratory-confirmed recovery of an infected patient who has now been discharged from care.

    WHO viral haemorrhagic fever technical officer Anais Legand confirmed to reporters that the recovered patient, who tested negative twice for the virus following treatment, was released from hospital and returned to their community on May 27. While this marks the first confirmed recovery among officially validated cases, Legand noted that additional unconfirmed recoveries are likely among individuals whose test results have not yet been processed by laboratories.

    As of the WHO’s latest update, the outbreak, which was formally declared on May 15, has been linked to 17 confirmed deaths and 223 suspected fatalities across the DRC. Out of 125 confirmed infections and more than 900 suspected cases recorded, 16 of the confirmed cases have been among frontline healthcare workers – a group uniquely vulnerable to the virus, which spreads through direct contact with bodily fluids, symptomatic patients, and the remains of people who have died from Ebola.

    “It is a terrible disease,” Legand commented, adding that healthcare workers often contract the virus while stepping in to care for infected community members. Responding to the outbreak is further complicated by the cultural and emotional challenges of asking communities to avoid close contact with sick loved ones, a critical measure to stop transmission from spreading.

    The outbreak has also spilled over into neighboring Uganda, where seven cases have been confirmed – one of which has ended in death. Three of the Ugandan cases were imported directly from the DRC, and all remaining confirmed cases are linked to those initial imports. At present, WHO officials have found no evidence of sustained community transmission within Uganda’s borders.

    This current outbreak is caused by the Bundibugyo strain of Ebola, a variant for which no targeted vaccine or specific antiviral treatment currently exists. The strain can carry a case fatality rate as high as 50%, though the current outbreak’s recorded fatality rate sits below 25% as of latest data, a figure that continues to evolve as more cases are confirmed.

    Over the past half-century, Ebola outbreaks across Africa have claimed more than 15,000 lives. This marks the 17th Ebola outbreak the DRC has faced; the deadliest of the country’s previous outbreaks, recorded between 2018 and 2020, killed nearly 2,300 people out of 3,500 confirmed cases.

    Despite the grim context of the outbreak, Legand emphasized that there is significant room to reduce mortality. Expanding access to optimized intensive care, supporting communities to identify early symptoms and pursue rapid diagnostic testing, and connecting patients to appropriate care early in their infection can drastically improve survival odds. “The most important thing is that we can support them to get early access to care,” Legand said. “Access to care can help save life.”

    Alongside early care access, WHO officials note that robust infection prevention protocols and safe burial practices for Ebola victims are critical to halting transmission, given the high infectiousness of deceased patients’ remains.

    On the global front, the agency has not called for any international travel or trade restrictions targeting the DRC or Uganda. The organization does recommend that infected individuals and close contacts of confirmed or suspected cases from affected areas avoid travel, and both the DRC and Uganda are required under International Health Regulations to implement exit screening for people leaving affected regions. But based on current epidemiological data, Legand confirmed that “WHO does not recommend any restriction on travel or trade with the Democratic Republic of the Congo or with Uganda.”