
Cholera cases soar in Congo, with 35,000 affected in 2025
KINHASA (XINHUA)The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) is facing a sharp resurgence of cholera, with cases reported in 17 of its 36 provinces, and over 35,000 infections recorded since the beginning of the year, authorities said.Minister of Public Health Roger Kamba told a briefing in Kinshasa, the capital, late Monday that the country remains in the "acute phase" of the outbreak."Being in the acute phase means that we are still seeing the number of cases rising," Kamba said.The outbreak, which has remained endemic in several eastern provinces since it first appeared in the country over half a century ago, is now spreading rapidly, especially in the capital, Kinshasa, a city of over 17 million people.
Despite increased efforts, the health minister acknowledged that "80 percent of deaths still occur within communities before patients reach hospitals." Kamba attributed the current surge to a combination of factors, including repeated flooding, lack of access to clean water, poor sanitation, and mass population movements.
To prevent cross-border spread, the health ministry has pledged to strengthen epidemiological surveillance at border checkpoints through the National Hygiene Program at Borders.
In addition to cholera, the DRC is also grappling with an outbreak of mpox, though a clear downward trend has emerged, Kamba said.
"We can say that with mpox, we're on a better path, but it's not over yet. We haven't declared the end of the mpox outbreak, but its trajectory is very positive," the minister said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Al Etihad
a day ago
- Al Etihad
Cholera cases soar in Congo, with 35,000 affected in 2025
16 July 2025 10:06 KINHASA (XINHUA)The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) is facing a sharp resurgence of cholera, with cases reported in 17 of its 36 provinces, and over 35,000 infections recorded since the beginning of the year, authorities of Public Health Roger Kamba told a briefing in Kinshasa, the capital, late Monday that the country remains in the "acute phase" of the outbreak."Being in the acute phase means that we are still seeing the number of cases rising," Kamba outbreak, which has remained endemic in several eastern provinces since it first appeared in the country over half a century ago, is now spreading rapidly, especially in the capital, Kinshasa, a city of over 17 million people. Despite increased efforts, the health minister acknowledged that "80 percent of deaths still occur within communities before patients reach hospitals." Kamba attributed the current surge to a combination of factors, including repeated flooding, lack of access to clean water, poor sanitation, and mass population movements. To prevent cross-border spread, the health ministry has pledged to strengthen epidemiological surveillance at border checkpoints through the National Hygiene Program at Borders. In addition to cholera, the DRC is also grappling with an outbreak of mpox, though a clear downward trend has emerged, Kamba said. "We can say that with mpox, we're on a better path, but it's not over yet. We haven't declared the end of the mpox outbreak, but its trajectory is very positive," the minister said.


Al Etihad
15-06-2025
- Al Etihad
Chinese research team launches clinical trial for brain-computer interface implant
15 June 2025 11:42 SHANGHAI (XINHUA)The Centre for Excellence in Brain Science and Intelligence Technology (CEBSIT) at the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), and Huashan Hospital affiliated with Fudan University, have successfully launched China's first clinical trial of an invasive brain-computer trials likely make China only the second country after the United States to progress BCI technology from laboratory research to clinical human applications.A Chinese man who is part of the trial can now play chess and racing games using only his mind, 13 years after he lost all four limbs in a high-voltage electrical accident. The patient underwent a revolutionary procedure in Shanghai in which a BCI device was implanted in his brain, and then undertook a few weeks of research team hopes to make the device available, following regulatory approval, by 2028, potentially transforming the lives of patients suffering from complete spinal cord injuries, double upper limb amputations, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. How It Works BCI technology establishes direct communication with the brain. Electrical signals from the brain have previously been used to control external devices during scientific research, but the devices were bulky. The ultra-flexible neural electrodes developed by the team in China are incredibly fine, measuring only about one-hundredth of the diameter of a human hair. But they are able to successfully acquire clear neural BCI implant itself measures measures 26 mm in diameter and less than 6 mm in thickness, roughly the size of a coin. It has to be implanted in the brain through minimally invasive there are mainly three BCI technological routes: non-invasive, semi-invasive, and invasive. Non-invasive methods are entirely non-surgical, while semi-invasive and invasive approaches involve surgical procedures. Next, the team in China aims to enable the patient to control a robotic arm, allowing him to grasp and hold objects like cups. They will also explore controlling complex devices, like robot dogs and embodied intelligent robots.


Khaleej Times
28-05-2025
- Khaleej Times
After deadly blast at China chemical plant, residents evacuate to safety
Residents near a chemical plant in eastern China were taking stock on Wednesday of the damage to their homes after a huge and still unexplained blast killed at least five, spewed out chemicals and shattered windows as far as a kilometre away. Plumes of black and grey smoke lingered over the plant at Gaomi, a city in the eastern province of Shandong, a day after the explosion, which the official Xinhua news agency said had injured 19, with six more missing. Farmer Yu Qianming said he and his wife had moved their grandchild elsewhere as a precaution, although they felt safe in their home as long as the wind kept blowing in a northerly direction. His family had escaped without injury, the 69-year-old said, while showing Reuters roofing material that fell and windows that shattered in the blast. Local officials have yet to issue the results of air quality tests on Tuesday, after a column of orange and black smoke billowed from the plant. On Wednesday, vehicles patrolled the perimeter of the site that sprawls over more than 47 hectares (116 acres), while drone footage showed multi-storey buildings flattened by the blast. Liu Ming, a 60-year-old who lives 500 m (547 yards) away, said she was considering moving after her home and clothing store suffered extensive damage, though she did not have any firm plans yet. She showed Reuters window frames pulverised by the blast, with shards of glass strewn among boxes of thread and clothes on the floor. Several shops away, another store owner had a minor head wound from the blast, which happened while he was eating lunch. Set up in August 2019 in the Gaomi Renhe chemical park, the Shandong Youdao Chemical plant develops and makes chemicals used in pesticides and pharmaceuticals, the company said on its website, with more than 300 employees at the site. Blasts in recent years at chemical plants in China have included one in the northwest region of Ningxia in 2024 and another in the southeastern province of Jiangxi in 2023. In 2015, two massive explosions at warehouses of hazardous and flammable chemicals in the port city of Tianjin that killed more than 170 people and injured 700 prompted tougher laws on storage of chemicals. Another blast that year at a Shandong chemical plant killed 13.