June3 , 2026

    Ebola Ground Zero: CNN’s Clarissa Ward on What It’s Like Inside the ‘Red Zone’

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    “So on my first day here,” says Clarissa Ward from a hospital in Bunia, the epicenter of the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s latest Ebola epidemic, “I’m sitting in the car and I hear the song.”

    “Ebola, Ebola,” the CNN journalist sings, recreating the tune she heard on the radio.

    “‘Is this a song about Ebola?'” she recalls asking her driver, thrown off by its upbeat sound. The driver explained that the song was a public safety announcement, offering directions for social distancing during the outbreak. The radio, Ward says, is one of the country’s most effective tools for disseminating public health information in a region where less than 80% of adults are literate and around half have access to a smartphone.

    Those limited communications channels are among the many obstacles the DRC faces as it fights its 17th—and potentially largest—Ebola outbreak. USAID is devastated, the WHO is underfunded, and unlike its predecessor, the Zaire strain, this new Bundibugyo ebolavirus has no vaccine or treatment. A diagnostic test is now available, but labs are so overwhelmed that results can take up to a week to return. That means makeshift wards are forced to house patients who may not even have Ebola alongside those who do, potentially infecting more people. The virus is spreading through a region where most people live in poverty, where conflict is ongoing, and where much of the population is transient, traveling across borders for work in industries like mining.

    And yet what sounds like an absolute nightmare, Ward says, is a much quieter picture of human suffering on the ground.

    “I think people have in their mind that it’s going to be out of a zombie movie,” says Ward, “And no, it’s not like that. It’s quieter. People that we saw barely had the strength to say two words, but you could see how much they were suffering. They were really in pain, and really scared.”

    “When you’re actually in these tents in the red zone with these people and seeing it up close and hearing their stories, it just gives it a very different, very human, perspective.”

    A CNN team traveled to DRC to report on the ground.

    Courtesy of CNN



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