Live Wednesday, 17 June 2026
BREAKING
Egyptian FM holds calls with Iranian counterpart , U.S. Envoy on regional developmentsZverev into French Open last-fourIsraeli fire kills four people in Gaza, medics sayAncelotti eases Neymar W. Cup fearsArab, Islamic states condemn Israeli actions at Al-AqsaSyria Hopes for Terrorism Delisting to Spur Economic RecoveryBenfica linked with Fulham’s SilvaVan der Breggen takes Giro leadKremlin: Saudi Arabia Named Guest of Honor at St. Petersburg Economic Forumرياضة محلية‘Really cool to share this journey with her’: Michelle Wie West playing for her family at U.S. Women’s OpenArchaeological Replicas Showcase Saudi Arabia’s Rich History at Kuala Lumpur Int’l Book FairRenewable Energy Helps Red Sea Global Avoid 118,000 Tons of Carbon EmissionsLetter: Carol Rumens obituaryEngland v India: third and deciding women’s T20 cricket international – liveHealthVolunteers serve comfort food in a worrying Ebola outbreak – Sault Michigan NewsEconomyTrump signs AI executive order asking companies to give government early access to modelsVarietySouth West Water fined nearly £2million after supplying homes with parasite-ridden water that left four people in hospital – and telling people it was safe to drinkScience & TechYour car is following you – how to reclaim your data privacy on the open roadWorldHigh school valedictorian yanked from stage after hijacking speech to rant against Israel and ICESaudi FM Receives Written Message from Russian CounterpartEgyptian FM holds calls with Iranian counterpart , U.S. Envoy on regional developmentsZverev into French Open last-fourIsraeli fire kills four people in Gaza, medics sayAncelotti eases Neymar W. Cup fearsArab, Islamic states condemn Israeli actions at Al-AqsaSyria Hopes for Terrorism Delisting to Spur Economic RecoveryBenfica linked with Fulham’s SilvaVan der Breggen takes Giro leadKremlin: Saudi Arabia Named Guest of Honor at St. Petersburg Economic Forumرياضة محلية‘Really cool to share this journey with her’: Michelle Wie West playing for her family at U.S. Women’s OpenArchaeological Replicas Showcase Saudi Arabia’s Rich History at Kuala Lumpur Int’l Book FairRenewable Energy Helps Red Sea Global Avoid 118,000 Tons of Carbon EmissionsLetter: Carol Rumens obituaryEngland v India: third and deciding women’s T20 cricket international – liveHealthVolunteers serve comfort food in a worrying Ebola outbreak – Sault Michigan NewsEconomyTrump signs AI executive order asking companies to give government early access to modelsVarietySouth West Water fined nearly £2million after supplying homes with parasite-ridden water that left four people in hospital – and telling people it was safe to drinkScience & TechYour car is following you – how to reclaim your data privacy on the open roadWorldHigh school valedictorian yanked from stage after hijacking speech to rant against Israel and ICESaudi FM Receives Written Message from Russian Counterpart
Prices
US dollar50.20EGPEuro58.29EGPBritish pound67.40EGPSaudi riyal13.39EGPUAE dirham13.67EGPKuwaiti dinar162.83EGPJordanian dinar70.81EGPQatari riyal13.79EGPTurkish lira1.08EGPChinese yuan7.42EGPGold 246,890.09EGP/gGold 216,028.83EGP/gGold 185,167.56EGP/gSilver109.98EGP/g
US dollar50.20EGPEuro58.29EGPBritish pound67.40EGPSaudi riyal13.39EGPUAE dirham13.67EGPKuwaiti dinar162.83EGPJordanian dinar70.81EGPQatari riyal13.79EGPTurkish lira1.08EGPChinese yuan7.42EGPGold 246,890.09EGP/gGold 216,028.83EGP/gGold 185,167.56EGP/gSilver109.98EGP/g
NEWS BREAKING
Front Slider

Liberia: Dr. Nyan Sounds Alarm as New Ebola Outbreak Emerges in DR Congo

Monrovia – As a fresh Ebola outbreak unfolds in the Democratic Republic of the Congo(DRC), one of Liberia’s leading public health voices, Dugbeh Christopher Nyan, is urging urgent action grounded in the painful lessons of the country’s own epidemic battle.


By Willie N. Tokpah, willien.tokpah@frontpageafricaonline.com


Speaking in a wide-ranging interview with Al Jazeera, Dr. Nyan, former Director General of the National Public Health Institute of Liberia, framed the current situation not as a distant crisis, but as a warning signal Liberia and the region cannot afford to ignore.

“We’ve been here before,” he said. “And what we learned then must guide what we do now.”

Lessons from Liberia’s Darkest Hours

Dr. Nyan played a role during the 2014–2016 Ebola Crisis, one of the deadliest outbreaks in modern history, which devastated Liberia, Guinea, and Sierra Leone.

He credited the eventual containment of the virus to swift international intervention and a coordinated global response.

According to him, the rapid deployment of expertise, including logistical and military support from the United States, proved decisive.

Equally important was the collaboration among multinational public health teams, researchers, and governments.

“When resources, both material and financial, were brought together, we were able to quell the outbreak,” Dr. Nyan explained. 

He believed that the same level of coordination is urgently needed now in Central Africa, particularly in the DRC and neighboring Uganda, where cases linked to less common Ebola strains have raised new concerns.

A Different Virus, A More Complex Fight

Dr. Nyan cautions that the current outbreak presents a different scientific challenge.

The West African epidemic was largely driven by the Zaire strain of Ebola, for which vaccines were eventually developed.

However, recent outbreaks in parts of Central and East Africa have involved rarer strains, complicating response strategies.

“The strain we are seeing now is not the same as what we experienced,” he noted.

“That means the tools we used before may not be fully effective.”

Still, he sees opportunity in existing scientific progress.

Vaccines developed for earlier strains, he said, could potentially be adapted into multivalent versions capable of targeting multiple Ebola variants.

Hope In New Technology—But Time Is Critical

Dr. Nyan pointed to advances in mRNA technology, widely used during the global fight against COVID-19, as a potential game-changer.

“If we apply that same technology, we can accelerate vaccine development significantly,” he said.

He estimates that, with adequate investment and global commitment, an effective vaccine response to the current strain could be developed within months.

But he also issued a note of caution: limited prior research on rare Ebola strains could slow progress.

“There is still a lot of work to do,” he warned. “Some of these strains have not been studied extensively.”

Beyond vaccines, Dr. Nyan emphasized that testing and community cooperation remain central to controlling outbreaks.

During Liberia’s crisis, fear and misinformation initially led to resistance in some communities. But as the severity of the virus became undeniable, more citizens began to accept testing and isolation measures.

Dr. Nyan himself contributed to the response by developing a diagnostic tool capable of distinguishing Ebola from other illnesses such as Malaria and typhoid, diseases with similar early symptoms.

“Testing helped us identify cases quickly and stop transmission,” he said. “Without it, the outbreak would have been much worse.”

What Liberia Must Do Now

With the virus once again active on the continent, Dr. Nyan says Liberia must not become complacent.

Despite improvements in surveillance and response systems, he warns that the country will remain at risk due to regional travel and porous borders.

He is calling for strengthened preparedness measures, including enhanced disease surveillance, continued training for health workers, public awareness campaigns, and rapid response readiness.

The World Health Organization has repeatedly stressed that outbreaks must be contained at their source to prevent global spread, a message Dr. Nyan strongly echoes.

“This is a moment to act”

For Dr. Nyan, the situation in the DRC is more than a public health alert; it is a test of whether the world has truly learned from past epidemics.

“Preparedness is not optional,” he said. “The virus moves fast, but with the right systems, we can move faster.”

As Liberia watches developments in Central Africa, his message is clear: vigilance, science, and coordination. Do not panic, must define the response. Because in the fight against Ebola, delay is the most dangerous risk of all.

المصدر: FrontPage Africa (Liberia)

0 Views

أضف تعليقاً

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *