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Canada News Updated May 27, 2026

Canada Tightens Borders: 90-Day Ebola Travel Ban and Quarantine Rules

Canada announced temporary border measures to reduce Ebola risk, suspending immigration documents for residents of DRC, Uganda, and South Sudan for 90 days. Processing of new applications from these countries is paused. Starting May 30, a mandatory 21-day quarantine applies to travelers from affected areas, with symptomatic individuals isolated in hospitals. The government cites low risk in Canada but takes precautionary steps due to the disease's severity and upcoming FIFA World Cup.

Canada introduces temporary border measures over Ebola concerns

Ottawa, May 27

The Canadian government announced a series of temporary border measures to reduce the risk of the Ebola virus entering and spreading within Canada.

According to a news release from the Public Health Agency of Canada, in response to the Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and rising risks in Uganda and South Sudan, Canada will suspend immigration documents for residents of these countries for 90 days, starting Wednesday at 23:59 Eastern Time.

Individuals of these three countries holding previously approved temporary resident visas, electronic travel authorizations or permanent resident visas will be barred from traveling to Canada, said the release.

The processing of new applications from residents of these countries will also be temporarily paused, added the release.

According to an additional measure, effective May 30 at 23:59 Eastern Time until August 29, Canada will enforce a mandatory 21-day quarantine for Canadian citizens, permanent residents, persons registered under the Indian Act, and foreign nationals who have visited the affected areas within the previous 21 days and do not have symptoms, while travellers who have symptoms will be isolated at a hospital for further assessment under the Quarantine Act, Xinhua news agency reported.

While emphasising that the risk to people in Canada remains low and there are currently no cases of Ebola disease in North America, the government said it is adopting a precautionary approach given the severity of the disease and the evolving international situation, including the upcoming FIFA World Cup.

According to the World Health Organization, Ebola disease is a severe, often fatal illness affecting humans and other primates.

The virus is transmitted to people from wild animals (such as fruit bats, porcupines and non-human primates) and then spreads in the human population through direct contact with the blood, secretions, organs or other bodily fluids of infected people, and with surfaces and materials (e.g. bedding, clothing) contaminated with these fluids.

The average Ebola disease case fatality rate is around 50 per cent. Case fatality rates have varied from 25-90 per cent in past outbreaks.

The first Ebola disease outbreaks occurred in remote villages in Central Africa, near tropical rainforests. The 2014-2016 Ebola virus disease outbreak in West Africa was the largest and most complex Ebola outbreak since the virus was first discovered in 1976. There were more cases and deaths in this outbreak than all others combined. It also spread between countries, starting in Guinea then moving across land borders to Sierra Leone and Liberia.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

This is sensible but also shows how privileged some countries are. Canada can just shut borders when they feel threatened, while poorer nations in Africa struggle with these outbreaks without such resources. We need global health cooperation, not isolation. 😔

Vikram M

As someone who works in healthcare, I support this precautionary approach. The 21-day quarantine for citizens and residents is smart - we saw during COVID how important early measures are. India should take similar steps at our international airports for passengers from affected regions. Prevention is better than cure!

Ananya R

Interesting that they mention the FIFA World Cup... So it's more about protecting their tourism and events than actually helping the affected countries? Typical Western response - close borders first, ask questions later. We saw same during COVID with travel bans that didn't even work.

Rohit P

Good move by Canada. We remember how the 2014 outbreak spread across West Africa - it was a nightmare. India should also be vigilant since we have many students and workers traveling to/from Canada. Better safe than sorry yaar. 🇮🇳

Kavya N

While I understand the concern, this seems like overkill when there are zero cases in North America. The WHO says risk remains low. Instead of blanket bans, why not invest in better screening at airports and helping African nations contain the outbreak? That would be more effective long-term.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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