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How to Stop Bundibugyo Ebola Before It Becomes Another Monument to Global Failure -By Fransiscus Nanga Roka

That failure is not abstract. It is indicative of a human value hierarchy built into global health. In Africa, outbreaks too often play out as local tragedies until they threaten the global flow of circulation. Money only flows once fear is globalised. It gets serious only when risk is flown. This is not international solidarity. It is disguised selfishness in the form of humanitarianism.

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Abstract Bundibugyo Ebola is not specifically a medical emergency in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda. It is a brutal reality check of whether the systems for global health are capable of much better than making statements after the fire has spread. An improbable candidate to become the leading backdrop for a Public Health Emergency of International Concern is this outbreak, which should have evoked extraordinary urgency from the World Health Organization as soon as its designation was proposed. Instead, it is a potential additional ceremonial alarm in the noise of a world which has adopted performative concern as its first language and forgotten how to do something about preventing anything.

The facts are already damning. This Ebola outbreak has rapidly affected Ituri province in eastern Congo, with hundreds of suspected cases and an imported case in Kampala, Uganda. It is not a bounded rural event. What it is, is a cross-border threat traversing through fragile health systems along with conflict-affected communities and deeply interconnected human networks. Even worse, this is Bundibugyo Ebola and not Zaire Ebola meaning there might well be no approved vaccine to lean on as a crutch or pharmaceutical suit of armor against institutional weakness.

That should terrify policymakers. Instead too many governments will likely turn to the same old play book: words, meetings travel fears and delayed logistical slow burn. That manner is not hardly deficient. It is lethal.

Now to halt Bundibugyo Ebola you need to lay aside the illusion that outbreaks can be finessed by bureaucratic elbow grease. The first rule is speed. It is essential to detect every suspected case and isolate, test it without delay. Contact tracing cannot be symbolic. It has to be targeted, localised and well-funded. The cross-border surveillance mechanism between Congo and Uganda has to work in real time, not on the slow moving paperwork that is slower than virus.

The second rule is trust. Control of Ebola falls apart where communities see health authorities as outsiders, opportunists or instruments of coercion. A militarized or purely technocratic response, however, would simply not work in eastern Congo most of all: any social life is preemptively poisoned by years of conflict and displacement and distrust of institutions. It is not because of the printed protocol from an international agency that people report symptoms (or do not), surrender relatives (or do not) and accept safe burial practices (or don’t). That happens when local leaders, religious figures, health workers and survivors are part of the response, experts with credibility no foreign briefing can conjure.

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The third rule is brutal wilful ignorance: no intervention will be able to quell this outbreak with the belief that emergency response would suffice. And Bundibugyo Ebola is walking through systems which were already fragile well before its first case. Clinics lack equipment. Laboratories lack reach. Surveillance lacks depth. Border health controls are patchy. If their shock is now feigned then wealthy governments and multilateral institutions are either dishonest or incompetent. Societies had years to prepare for the next outbreak. It just chose not to prepare with equal vigor for all.

That failure is not abstract. It is indicative of a human value hierarchy built into global health. In Africa, outbreaks too often play out as local tragedies until they threaten the global flow of circulation. Money only flows once fear is globalised. It gets serious only when risk is flown. This is not international solidarity. It is disguised selfishness in the form of humanitarianism.

So what must happen now? It should include aggressive case finding, decentralized testing for a rapid outbreak response in Congo and Uganda; strict infection prevention measures at clinics, protection of frontline workers rounding out the social safeguards as well honest public communications to build trust with populations along affected borders coordinated regional surveillance. This must be received as a continental security matter, not just an embarrassing coup to the national image for Africa CDC and neighbouring states alike. But it demands hyper-scaled, rapid money and logistics from international partners — all without rendering African governments props on the donor virtue stage.

It is not too late to contain Bundibugyo Ebola. But only if the answer comes faster than denial, more local than rhetoric and far graver than the international health theatre that often reveals itself anytime Africa is to be revered for having very little of its own eagle. If this outbreak worsens the tragedy will not be a lack of warnings to the world. The tragedy will be that once again it had warning and opted for performance over preparedness.

If Bundibugyo Ebola becomes yet another global failure, the virus will not be the only author of this disaster. Human negligence will be.

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Fransiscus Nanga Roka

Faculty of Law University 17 August 1945 Surabaya Indonesia

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