Zambia Says Two Suspected Ebola Cases Test Negative, Steps up Screening

May 30 (Reuters) – Zambia has investigated ⁠and ⁠cleared two suspected cases ⁠of Ebola as it steps up screening ​and surveillance for the deadly viral disease following an outbreak ‌in neighbouring Democratic Republic ‌of Congo.

Congolese authorities said on Friday suspected cases ⁠from ⁠the rare Bundibugyo strain of Ebola, for which there ​is no vaccine, had risen to 1,028.

Cases have also been reported in Uganda.

Zambia’s health ministry said late on Friday ​that there was a high risk of Ebola crossing the ⁠border ⁠but two suspected cases ⁠had ​been cleared by laboratory tests.

“Zambia has developed screening tools and ​protocols, which are ⁠already being used to screen for Ebola at entry points into Zambia and on people within the country who have Ebola-like symptoms,” the ministry added in ⁠its statement.

The Bundibugyo strain, named after a Ugandan province where ⁠it was first identified nearly 20 years ago, has alarmed experts because of how long it went undetected while spreading across a densely populated area, making it difficult to trace and isolate the contacts of infected individuals.

According to the World Health Organization, Ebola viruses initially cause flu-like symptoms including fever, ⁠fatigue, malaise, muscle pain, headache and sore throat that can start suddenly, followed by vomiting and diarrhoea and eventually by internal and external bleeding and ​multi-organ failure.

(Reporting by Chris Mfula, editing by ​Nelson Banya and Andrew Cawthorne)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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