Wed, 1 Jul 2026 · LIVE
Updated May 29, 2026 · 19:36
World News Updated May 29, 2026

Italy Sends Expert Team to DRC as Ebola Outbreak Intensifies

Italy is sending a team of experts from Rome's Spallanzani infectious diseases hospital to the Democratic Republic of the Congo to help combat the Ebola outbreak. Prime Minister Georgia Meloni has urged European Union leaders to enhance border surveillance coordination to prevent the spread of the virus. The World Health Organization reports 906 suspected Ebola cases in DRC and has upgraded the risk level to "very high" in the country. No vaccines or therapies currently exist for the rare Bundibugyo Ebola virus strain involved in this outbreak.

Combatting Ebola outbreak: Italy sending team of experts to DRC

Rome, May 29

Italy's government is urging Europe to step up surveillance coordination at its borders to combat the spread of Ebola, Italy's Prime Minister Georgia Meloni's office said in a statement on Friday.

Italy is sending a team of experts from Rome's Spallanzani infectious diseases hospital to the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) "as early as this weekend" to help combat the outbreak and strengthen monitoring and control of the virus, PM Meloni's office added.

"Italy believes that the epidemiological situation in Central Africa linked to the recent outbreak of the Bundibugyo Ebola virus (BVD strain) in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and (neighbouring) Uganda requires the utmost attention," read the statement, Adnkronos news agency reported.

For this reason, Meloni has written to the European Union Council President Nikos Christodoulides, European Council President Antonio Costa, and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, the statement said.

"The aim is to urge - while respecting national prerogatives on health protection - enhanced coordination of border surveillance through common rules for managing direct and indirect arrivals from the affected areas," the statement went on.

Meloni has proposed discussing the issue of border management at the European Council meeting on June 18-19. The government has requested a video-conference of EU health ministers on border surveillance coordination "as early as next week" and for "operational priorities" to be agreed at the EPSCO (Employment, Social Policy, Health and Consumer Affairs Council) on 16 June, according to the statement

At the national level, in coordination with Italy's civil protection department, the health ministry has issued guidelines" for the implementation of targeted health surveillance and monitoring protocols for travellers returning from affected regions," the statement continued.

Furthermore, "Italy will send a team of experts from the Spallanzani Institute to Kinshasa, in the DRC, to provide technical assistance, deliver medical supplies and medicines, and strengthen epidemiological surveillance," the statement added.

Italy's foreign and health ministries, civil protection department and foreign intelligence service have arranged the Spalanzani mission to Kinshasa, the statement noted.

There are 906 suspected cases of ‌Ebola in DRC, including 223 suspected deaths that are being investigated, the World Health Organisation (WHO) warned on Friday. Seven cases have been confirmed in Uganda, three of which were imported from DRC and one death.

WHO has upgraded the risk from the current Ebola outbreak from"high" to "very high" in DRC.

In the wider region, the risk is also now considered to be high, but it remains low internationally, the WHO added.

WHO declared a public health emergency of international concern on Sunday, when it stressed that the outbreak was not a pandemic.

There are currently no vaccines or therapies for the rare BVD strain of Ebola.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Jennifer L

Honestly, the WHO downgrading risk to 'low internationally' feels premature. With no vaccine for this strain, and cases in Uganda, Europe should be bracing for potential spread. Italy's call for border coordination is sensible—better to act now than scramble later.

Manish T

Italy sending experts is commendable, but let's not forget that Africa has been dealing with Ebola for decades with limited global support. The real issue is building local healthcare infrastructure. Sending teams is temporary; empowering DRC's own health system is permanent.

Sarah B

As someone who lived through COVID lockdowns, I worry about border surveillance turning into discriminatory travel bans against African nations. We need smart monitoring, not stigma. Glad Italy at least seems to be proposing coordination over restriction.

Ritu A

Respect to Italy for stepping up, but 906 suspected cases and no vaccine? That's terrifying. 😰 India should learn from this—our public health system needs to be ready for emerging diseases. We can't rely on others to save us every time.

Matthew K

Italy's PM Meloni pushing EU coordination is smart. But why are we discussing border control when the real solution is investing in global health security? These viruses don't respect borders anyway.

Siddhartha F

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

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked