Congo lab testing confirms deadly disease outbreak was malaria

Health officials said in February that the condition was suspected to be either malaria or food poisoning.
Testing has confirmed that an initially unidentified illness that killed more than 50 people in northwest Democratic Republic of Congo was malaria, the country's National Public Health Institute (INSP) said late on Monday.
At least 943 people fell sick and 52 died in Equateur province at the start of the year, with symptoms ranging from fever and fatigue to vomiting and weight loss.
More To Read
- Amnesty International slams DRC-Rwanda peace deal for ignoring war crimes accountability
- IOM welcomes Rwanda–DRC peace deal, urges tangible impact for displaced communities
- UN Security Council extends sanctions on DRC
- DRC at 65: Tshisekedi calls for peace on independence day as M23 asserts control in Goma
- DRC-Rwanda peace deal: What you need to know
- Rwanda, DR-Congo peace deal reached during Washington talks
Health officials said in February that the condition was suspected to be either malaria or food poisoning.
Lab testing on samples has now confirmed that it was malaria, INSP coordinator Christian Ngandu said by telephone.
The research centre was still waiting for the results of water, drinks and food samples sent abroad to test for intoxication, he added.
A separate outbreak of disease in December, initially of unknown cause, was ultimately also identified as malaria.
Top Stories Today