The Democratic Republic of Congo recorded 32 suspected cases of the Ebola virus in the past month, of which two have been confirmed, the World Health Organization said.
The cases, including 18 deaths, were registered around the town of Bikoro in Congo's northwestern Equateur province between April 4 and May 9, the Geneva-based body said in a statement. Other than the two confirmed cases, 18 patients are considered probable carriers of the Ebola virus, it said.
The Geneva-based body plans to ship experimental vaccines for the virus to the central African country "as quickly as possible so they can be used to save lives," WHO Director-General Tedros Ghebreyesus said on his Twitter account.
This is Congo's ninth recorded Ebola outbreak, the last of which was in 2017. An Ebola outbreak in Equateur province in 2014 killed 49 people. The cases were unrelated to the epidemic in West Africa that year in which more than 11,000 people died. The viral disease, which has no known cure or proven vaccine, was first reported in 1976 in Congo and takes its name from a river in that country.
'Several Viruses'