Five Congolese refugees have been isolated at Nyakabande refugee transit camp in Kisoro District after testing positive for Covid-19.
The assistant district health officer, Ms Annette Dusabe said although the patients are not very sick, they have been isolated to avoid transmitting the disease to others.
“It’s true we have isolated the five refugees. We are closely monitoring their health as we treat every symptom that manifests,” Ms Dusabe said.
She advised the health workers, staff from different humanitarian organisations operating at the transit camp and the general population in the district to observe standard operating procedures to avoid contracting the disease.
The deputy Resident District Commissioner, Robert Tukamuhebwa, said since March when Congolese refugees started crossing into the district following the escalation of the M23 conflict, they have tested 47,993 of them and found 677 with the virus.
“We had about 2,365 Congolese refugees at Nyakabande refugee transit centre as of Sunday and we continue to receive on average 500 daily because of the recent fresh fighting [between DRC government and M23 rebels],” observed Tukamuhebwa.
He said the cumulative number of Congolese refugees manually registered in Kisoro since March is 63,510 individuals and 32,286 households.
The deputy RDC added that the situation in DRC is still fragile, with fighting being reported in the areas of Rutshuru and Kiwanja, forcing more refugees to flee into Kisoro through Bunagana, Busanza and other porous border entries. He also said most asylum seekers from DRC are coming from the areas of Kinyamahura, Runyoni, Gisiza, Gisigali, Gichambwa, Chanzu, Runyoni, Karambo, Gitovu, Mucheya, Nyarubara, Karengera and Kiwanja, with majority fleeing from areas close to the Chanzu M23 base.
“We noted that the majority of the Congolese refugees this time are fleeing without any significant household or personal belongings as it has been the trend before, and majority are women and children.
More than 721 asylum seekers accessed asylum space through the Bunagana and Busanza border posts at the weekend,” Tukamuhebwa said.
The emergence of Covid-19 comes as health authorities in Kisoro have expressed fear of an Ebola outbreak due to a lack of equipment to screen the Congolese refugees that cross into the district daily. In August, DR Congo registered a new Ebola case in the country’s North Kivu Province.