
WHO AFRO
WHO's Africa regional office, Brazzaville; confirmed Bundibugyo outbreak and deployed mobile lab to Uganda border.
Last refreshed: 17 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Why did WHO AFRO list response partners without naming US CDC in its Bundibugyo release?
Timeline for WHO AFRO
Mentioned in: Ituri outbreak ran undetected for weeks
Pandemics and BiosecurityUSAID outbreak unit gone by PHEIC
Pandemics and BiosecurityAfrica CDC moved first, Kinshasa silent
Pandemics and BiosecurityMentioned in: Kinshasa lab confirms species on 14 May
Pandemics and BiosecurityConfirmed mobile laboratory deployment to Bwera Hospital
Pandemics and Biosecurity: Uganda runs 2022 Sudan Ebola playbookWhat is WHO AFRO doing in response to the Bundibugyo Ebola outbreak?
Where is WHO AFRO based and what countries does it cover?
Background
WHO AFRO (the WHO Regional Office for Africa) is one of WHO's six regional offices, headquartered in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo, and responsible for coordinating WHO's health programmes across 47 African member states. It operates as a semi-autonomous regional body within the WHO architecture, with its own Director-General and secretariat. For disease outbreak response, WHO AFRO publishes Disease Outbreak News updates and coordinates field response alongside WHO headquarters in Geneva.
For the Bundibugyo PHEIC, WHO AFRO issued the coordination release confirming the DRC outbreak and detailing the immediate field response: airlifting five metric tonnes of supplies to Bunia, deploying a mobile laboratory to Bwera Hospital in Uganda's Kasese district on the DRC border, and confirming 25 contacts under monitoring in Kampala and the Kasese border area. Notably, WHO AFRO's release lists WHO and partners as the response coordination team but does not name deployed US CDC personnel — a significant omission given that US CDC was named in Africa CDC's 16 May coordination statement.
WHO AFRO was also the regional coordinating body during the 2018-19 Kivu outbreak, the 2022 Sudan ebolavirus response in Uganda, and the 2024 mpox PHECS. Its institutional capacity is the operational layer through which WHO Geneva signals translate into field-level responses in DRC and Uganda. The Brazzaville headquarters location — in the Republic of the Congo, directly across the Congo River from Kinshasa, DRC — reflects the historical geography of Ebola's endemic zone.