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No Vaccine, No Excuse: How Congo and Uganda Must Crush Bundibugyo Ebola Now -By Fransiscus Nanga Roka

But scolding and shaming do not control contagious diseases. Congo and Uganda must approach this with the seriousness of wartime. Isolate fast. Trace hard. Bury safely. Protect health workers. Tell the truth early. Secure the frontline. Before fear runs faster than the response, be proactive and inundate flooded hot zones with logistical supports. And most importantly, stop pretending the absence of a vaccine translates into lack of agency.

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Vaccine

There is currently no licensed vaccine for Ebola virus disease due to the Bundibugyo ebolavirus. That is a scientific limitation. It would be a political crime to treat that fact as an alibi for inertia.

Most dangerously the latest fallacy being spread as outbreak take hold in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo and across into Uganda is that without a vaccine then virus cannot be contained. That is nonsense. There was no vaccine in the fight against Ebola and Bundibugyo Ebola is beatable; but this can only happen if Congo, Uganda (and also international system) stop lying behind technical parlance to address the brutal realities of Zulagir’s that transmission relies on: conflict, mistrustions weakness frontline enforcement already entrenched unsafe burials hidden exploited delayed isolation categorical governments use each time panic has priority over policy.

The first observation and it is intended as an affirmation, which begets a simple truth: this was no longer simply a medical event. It is a stress test of state capacity. In both Congo and Uganda, the vocabulary of response must go beyond the familiar rituals of monitoring and coordination. You need to isolate suspected cases quickly, trace loves contacts in an aggressive manner, impose strict border discipline and communicate with your community consistently honestly. Ebola does not bargain with bureaucracy. Every day lost due to administrative foot-dragging is a gift for the virus.

This is even more explosive in Congo; Ebola goes where insecurity permits. It does not just complicate outbreak control, armed conflict destroys it. If it is burned, a life-saving treatment center will not save lives. If health workers are attacked, then surveillance collapses. If scared families see the state as either non-existent, hostile to their interests or foreign where systems of safe burial do not immediately take effect, indigenous funerary rites become a source of anxiety. We must bury the fantasy that epidemic control can succeed without physical security. If authorities cannot secure health corridors, protect treatment units and ensure safe access for responders, then they are not combating Ebola, they’re yielding ground to it.

In Uganda there is a different but similarly daunting challenge: the false promise of being merely adjacent to peril. Cross-border outbreaks punish complacency. This is how it get bad, Wait to “see how bad it gets” Uganda needs to behave as though silent transmission were already probing its defenses. Which includes screening at international gateways, mass swift community testing bodies in probable hotspots, pre-deployed isolation centres,cross-trained burial team and appropriate risk communication for border populace. Not panic. Precision. But precision delivered fast.

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The second piece of truth, perhaps even more uncomfortable: Ebola cannot be controlled at the public level without trust. For this reason, we repeatedly watch the same mistake being made by governments and global agencies, the arrogant assumption that fear can be controlled with guidance. It cannot. The rejection of medical protocols and guidelines does not happen in a vacuum; communities are rejecting systems they do not trust. If families resist burial practices or evade treatment centers, moral browbeating from a safe distance is not the answer. It is only by building legitimacy on the ground through local leaders, faith networks, survivor testimony and appropriate communication which acknowledges grief rather than bulldozes it.

This is where the international response has to stop acting concerned and start providing capabilities. Congo and Uganda must have mobile dry labs, infection prevention supplies and protective equipment, trained rapid response teams to mobilise at a moment’s notice across secure logistic routes, emergency financing capacity than can be accessed next time an outbreak enters the human population as well operational support on the ground that goes beyond more rounds of tepid diplomatic statements. When the practical tools arrive too late or in insufficient quantity, a Public Health Emergency of International Concern doesn not mean anything at all. Ebola is not stopped by emergency declarations. Operational speed does.

And let us be frank: the health establishment of the world needs examination as well. Bundibugyo Ebola is not common but “notcommon” has often been an eloquent euphemism for a disease that enjoys neglect. That there is no approved vaccine says more than just the scientific challenge; it speaks to the brutal social sciences of where global research attention and funding goes. Treating diseases that endanger impoverished, war-torn African populations as intermittent tragedies instead being treated as constant obligations standing not begging arms.

But scolding and shaming do not control contagious diseases. Congo and Uganda must approach this with the seriousness of wartime. Isolate fast. Trace hard. Bury safely. Protect health workers. Tell the truth early. Secure the frontline. Before fear runs faster than the response, be proactive and inundate flooded hot zones with logistical supports. And most importantly, stop pretending the absence of a vaccine translates into lack of agency.

Bundibugyo Ebola is dangerous. Delay is deadlier. The virus is not invincible and if Congo and Uganda fail to quash this outbreak now, it would be because the vaccine got them first. It will be because, once again, politics and mistrust more so than this pathogen itself or any other deterministic force of nature will have spread like wildfire.

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Fransiscus Nanga Roka
Faculty of Law University 17 August 1945 Surabaya Indonesia

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