Museveni: Uganda Registers Five Days Without New Ebola Cases

Andrew Matege·Health·

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Museveni: Uganda Registers Five Days Without New Ebola Cases

President Yoweri Museveni has revealed that Uganda has gone five days without a new Ebola case

Photo: Courtesy of PPU

President Yoweri Museveni has revealed that Uganda has gone five days without a new Ebola case, using a live national address to ban handshakes and demand strict public discipline to completely eliminate the outbreak.

Uganda has recorded a critical public health breakthrough after going five consecutive days without registering a single new infection of the deadly Ebola virus.

The epidemiological milestone indicates that the country’s aggressive medical containment protocols and cross-border screening measures are successfully breaking the chain of transmission. President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni announced the positive development during a highly anticipated, live televised national address broadcast from state logistically monitored installations.

The Head of State revealed that the cumulative case count remains stable at 19 validated infections. Out of these, 14 cases belong to a single Congolese family that entered the country via the western frontier, while the remaining five are Ugandan nationals.

President Museveni noted that clinical teams are now recording steady patient recoveries within isolation facilities. He used the national broadcast to rally citizens to put public health safety above short-term economic interests.

“Fellow Ugandans, health is more important than wealth. I am encouraged that in the last five days, we have not registered any new Ebola infections and are instead recording recoveries,” President Museveni stated.

The President reminded the country that Uganda possesses a globally acclaimed track record of completely crushing dangerous public health emergencies. He cited the nation’s historical success in neutralizing previous Ebola outbreaks, checking the spread of HIV/AIDS, and managing the global COVID-19 pandemic through absolute societal cohesion.

He warned, however, that early signs of success must not breed public complacency. Because the hemorrhagic fever spreads primarily through direct physical and intimate contact with body fluids, any lapse in personal discipline could instantly trigger a fresh wave of infections.

The Commander-in-Chief issued a strict directive banning traditional physical greetings nationwide. He instructed the public to immediately substitute handshakes with non-contact gestures like waving to insulate families from transmission.

“We defeated Ebola before, and with discipline and cooperation, we shall defeat it again,” President Museveni emphasized.

The Ministry of Health and global partners like the World Health Organization (WHO) will maintain maximum surveillance, contact tracing, and emergency border operations along high-risk routes to ensure the outbreak is completely eradicated.

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