The number of Ebola cases in Congo has surpassed
1,000, the health ministry said, as the second-largest outbreak ever
of the virus continues to wreak havoc in the central African country.
"Behind these numbers are several hundred Congolese families directly
affected by the virus and hundreds of orphans," health minister Oly
Ilunga Kalenga said in a statement released late on Sunday.
Kalenga described the outbreak as "a human and social tragedy."
A total of 629 people have died of Ebola in the outbreak in eastern
Congo, which began shortly after the country's government in June
declared an end to another outbreak in the west of the country.
Some 320 people had recovered, placing the average survival rate
within treatment centres at more than 60 per cent, the ministry
statement said.
More than 91,000 people have been vaccinated against the virus since
August, it added.
Authorities and aid groups have struggled to do their jobs in the
dangerous eastern region where numerous militias operate, most
fighting over the country's rich natural resources.
Ebola is a highly infectious disease that causes a fever and often
leads to massive internal bleeding and death.
Community representatives visit a family in Beni as part of spreading awareness about Ebola