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Aid Group Samaritan’s Purse Plans 50-Bed Ebola Unit in Congo

GENEVA, May 27 (Reuters) – Christian aid ⁠group ⁠Samaritan’s Purse hopes ⁠to open within a week a 50-bed ​Ebola treatment centre in the area of the outbreak ‌in northeastern Democratic Republic of ‌Congo, its President told Reuters.

The World Health ⁠Organization ⁠has declared the outbreak of the rare Bundibugyo strain ​of Ebola, for which there are no approved vaccines or treatments, a public health emergency of international concern. ​Medics battling the outbreak are grappling with supply shortages ⁠as well ⁠as attacks on ⁠their ​facilities, with protesters setting fire to tents for patients in ​Rwamparaek in the ⁠Ituri province last week.

“We have a lot more security available to us in Bunia, so we feel confident that we will be okay from ⁠those type of attacks,” Franklin Graham, President of Samaritan’s Purse, ⁠told Reuters in an interview late on Tuesday, referring to the provincial capital.

He said the organisation – which helped in Congo during the 2018-2020 outbreak – will also be working with local churches and spreading information leaflets to educate communities and gain community trust.

Materials for the centre, including generators ⁠and air conditioners to cool down patients and medics working in full protective gear, are set to arrive in Ituri on Wednesday. “You’re building a ​small town,” he said.

(Reporting by Emma Farge, ​Editing by Linda Pasquini)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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