Saturday, June 06, 2026

 Can Hawaii wean itself of oil imports?

DW
06/04/2026

Hawaii imports much of its fuel — and pays the price. From solar to geothermal, the state is searching for a way out of fossil fuel dependence.

Hawaii is trying to transition away from being an oil-dependent economy but many challenges remain
Image: Cathy Bussewitz/AP Photo/picture alliance

A chain of islands in the middle of the Pacific Ocean without domestic oil or gas reserves, the 50th US state has long relied on imported fossil fuels to power its economy.

Foreign petroleum fuels much of the energy grid, and the sea and air transport that Hawaii relies on to move people and goods — and to deliver the near 10 million annual tourists to its shores.

Hawaii began to reduce this fuel dependency in 2015 when it became the first US state to commit to transitioning to 100% renewable electricity by 2045. The aim was to exploit homegrown solar, wind, bioenergy, hydroelectricity, and geothermal power contained in its volcanic landscape.

That target was expanded out to the whole economy in 2018, with Hawaii adopting a pioneering "net-negative" carbon emissions goal for 2045 at the latest. And a world first youth-led climate case also forced the state to decarbonize the transport sector by the same year.

Peter Sternlicht, a board member of renewable energy nonprofit, Sustainable Energy Hawaii, says such ambitious sustainable energy targets that "minimize, or wholly eliminate, dependence on imported energy" have been driven by a quest for energy self-reliance.



As the latest oil shock caused by the US-Israel war on Iran resonates across global markets, the goal remains even more relevant. But how can a decarbonized, energy independent economy be achieved within 20 years?
 
The challenge

"The state needs many policies if it's going to hit its 2045 goal," said Paul Bernstein, an economic policy specialist at the University of Hawaii.

Hawaii's chain of islands have diverse energy needs based on their population and geography. The island of Oahu, containing the state's largest city, Honolulu, will not be easy to decarbonize.

"On Oahu, where population density and land constraints make the transition more challenging, the state is prioritizing grid modernization, more efficient generation, and major private-sector investment to support large-scale renewables and storage in the years ahead," said Mark B. Glick, chief energy officer of the Hawaii State Energy Office.

Meanwhile on Maui, after a 2023 hurricane downed power lines that sparked wildfires claiming 102 lives, the state energy office says it has been a challenge for Hawaiian Electric, the state's largest utility, to continue an affordable transition to renewable energy.

Even where wind, solar and batteries are helping with the transition, and with around 50% of homes on Oahu having rooftop solar, Glick says geothermal energy needs to be a bigger part of the mix.

On Hawaii Island, the state's largest, abundant geothermal energy had been harnessed to provide a peak of around 30% of its electricity in 2017. Output was subsequently reduced by a volcanic eruption but the authorities are planning a 20% capacity expansion by late 2026.

 
With the Pacific islands state so reliant on air transport, decarbonizating will be a struggleImage: Markus Mainka/Shotshop/picture alliance

A major challenge for Hawaii is decarbonizing shipping and air travel, exacerbated by a reliance on planes for tourism.

"Basically all our goods are brought in from somewhere else," noted Paul Bernstein. He says sustainable aviation fuel and plane efficiency improvements will help reduce air emissions, but that flight electrification is a long way off.

Pathways to decarbonization


In 2022, the Hawaii state legislature passed an act calling for the state energy office to "analyze pathways" and to achieve the state's "economy-wide decarbonization goals."

A report commissioned by the state legislature presented decarbonization scenarios in which Hawaii's energy sector could transition within decades. It would require solar, wind and storage to be "deployed at an unprecedented rate", combustion engine vehicles to be phased out in favor of zero emission EVs, and the retrofitting of buildings for better heating and cooling efficiency.

In addition, increased quantities of sustainable aviation fuel would have to replace standard jet fuel needed for air travel.

But the report also notes that biodiesel, biomass, geothermal, and hydropower generation would have to play a "notable role" if all Hawaiian islands are to meet the 2045 net-zero target.

A fossil fuel phase-out could also be accelerated with a carbon tax that increases the prices of oil or gas to promote the transition to clean energy. Meanwhile, existing taxes on each barrel of imported fuel are already supporting decarbonization programs.

A carbon tax could also be vital to developing geothermal energy , which remains the biggest hope for a transition to clean domestic energy. A relatively small-sized geothermal plant typically utilizes underground volcanic heat to create steam that turns a turbine to generate zero carbon power.

"The State is conducting resource characterization of geothermal potential to better understand where geothermal can be developed, consistent with cultural values and community interests," said Glick.

While it was long assumed that the energy source was not viable on the most populous island of Oahu, more recent discussions indicate "that geothermal actually could be available where it's needed most," said Paul Bernstein.

"If that were the case, then that would really change the game," he added.

Hawaii's active volcanoes are a rich source of homegrown geothermal energyImage: J. Barnett/U.S. Geological Survey/AP Photo/picture alliance

Although production costs are relatively low over a facility's lifetime, it can be costly to uncover geothermal resources and much more investment will be needed in the exploratory phase. Local consultation will also be vital due to pushback from native Hawaiian communities over tapping into sacred volcanoes.
Renewable roadblocks and calls for LNG

Since it will be difficult to sufficiently ramp up geothermal energy in the next 20 years to meet the 2045 transition goals, the Hawaii state government has recently contemplated lower emission "transition" fuels to maintain momentum away from high polluting energy.

Hawaii is considering retiring inefficient oil-powered electricity generators and replacing them with one high-efficiency gas-fired generator fueled with imported liquefied natural gas (LNG).

The state-of-the-art power plant would reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 20% over 20 years, and be 20% cheaper than oil-fired energy — Hawaii's electricity is the most expensive in the US.

Mark Glick of the Hawaii State Energy Office, says the more technologically-advanced gas power plant is better able to "increase renewable integration" into the grid.

Hawaii is considering LNG to keep the lights on as it shifts to renewable energy, but is it necessary?Image: Ron Jenkins/Getty Images

But experts say that while LNG is cheaper than oil and has lower emissions, the cooling, shipping and regasification costs are also high.

If renewable energy continues to expand along with battery storage, LNG plants could become expensive, underused assets. "Solar and battery systems are already competitive with fossil fuels and avoid the risks tied to global fuel markets," noted analysis by the University of Hawaiʻi Economic Research Organization.

Edited by: Tamsin Walker


Stuart Braun Berlin-based journalist with a focus on climate and culture.
Albanians protest Jared Kushner-backed resort plan on nature reserve

Protesters on Saturday gathered at the Vjosa-Narta lagoon, a nature reserve on the Albanian coast, to denounce a plan by US President Donald Trump's son-in-law, Jared Kushner, to build a ​luxury resort inan ‌environmentally sensitive area. Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama has insisted that "top" experts will be involved in the project, which has yet to be approved.


Issued on: 06/06/2026 - 
By: FRANCE 24

Protestors against a plan to build a luxury seaside resort by a company linked to the Trump family gather in a nature reserve in Zvërnec, Albania, June 6, 2026. © Adnan Beci, AFP

Several hundred people gathered Saturday in a protected nature reserve on the Albanian coast to protest at plans for a luxury beach resort by a company linked to the Trump family.

Answering a call from environmental organisations, activists from across the country as well as local residents flocked midday to the Vjosa-Narta lagoon, some 150 kilometres (90 miles) southwest of the capital Tirana.

"The whole of this marine area is a protected zone. To destroy it would be fatal for this region's biodiversity," Emiljona Puja, a finance worker, told AFP.

Protesters gathered on a sandy beach facing azure waters, some waving red Albanian flags, others carrying inflatable flamingos -- the movement’s symbol -- while chanting "cancel the project!".

There had been unrest at the location during an initial protest in late May against preparatory onsite work during installation of barbed wire to cordon off the area. The barbed wire has since been removed.

People rushed there after seeing videos on social media showing construction work and bulldozers on the beach. Those machines were not there on Saturday either.

AFP journalists observed concrete foundations for a fence on the ground that had also been removed.

Protests against a project whose cost is estimated at some four billion euros ($4.6 billion) and is linked to Donald Trump’s daughter Ivanka Trump and her husband Jared Kushner are gaining momentum in the Balkan country.

Thousands of protesters have been gathering every evening for nearly a week in Tirana to denounce what they view as the planned destruction of entire sections of the Vjosa-Narta Nature Reserve and its conversion into a luxury tourist destination.

According to the plan, developers also hope to transform the uninhabited island of Sazan -- once a secret communist military base -- into a glitzy tourist destination.

The coastal lagoon on the southern Adriatic coact is home to many migratory birds, including flamingos.

"This is a problem not only regarding the transparency of this whole process, but also everything has happened with a complete disregard of the environmental importance of this area," said Denisa Kasa, of the Albanian Association for the Protection of the Environment (PPNEA).

"This area is one of the most important biodiversity hotspots in the Mediterranean," added Kasa.

Prime Minister Edi Rama on Friday downplayed the protests, insisting there was "no reason to worry" and added the project had yet to be approved.

He insisted that "top" world experts were involved in the plan and that the aim was "to make something unique".

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)

Kushner-backed Albania resort sparks protests, EU concerns

Rashela Shehu
DW
06/04/2026


Donald Trump's son-in-law is linked to a megaproject on Albania's protected coast that has triggered protests and EU scrutiny over risks to flamingos and endangered habitats.

A protestor to Jared Kushner's proposed development, which would bring luxury tourism to a stretch of protected coastline in Albania
Image: Hameraldi Agolli/AP Photo/dpa/picture alliance

Bulldozers, barbed-wire fences and security guards dragging protesters across the sand are not the images Albania hoped would dominate headlines just days after it received positive signals from Brussels over progress in its EU accession talks.

Yet that is precisely what happened in the Narta Lagoon area, a protected landscape on the country's southern coast.

At the center of the dispute is the proposed Zvernec Peninsula development, a tourism project linked to Jared Kushner, the son-in-law of US President Donald Trump. What started as a fight over construction in a protected area has grown into a wider debate about development, environmental protection and Albania's future in Europe.

Just 8 kilometers (5 miles) from the city of Vlora, developers are planning what could become one of the largest tourism projects in Albania's history. The company behind it says it could exceed €4 billion ($4.6 billion) and create more than 10,000 jobs. Prime Minister Edi Rama has described it as a strategic investment that could help move Albania into the top tier of global tourism.
Why is the Kushner-linked resort facing protests?

Pishe Poro–Narta is one of Albania's most important protected coastal landscapes. Its lagoons, wetlands, pine forests and sand dunes provide habitat for hundreds of species and serve as an important stopover point for migratory birds traveling between Europe and Africa, including protected pink flamingos.


Protesters shouted anti-government slogans during a demonstration in Tirana on TuesdayImage: Armando Babani/Matrix Images/picture alliance

On the morning of May 30, activists walked through pine forests and sand dunes to reach the construction site. Waiting for them were construction equipment, newly erected fences and private security guards.

Videos shared on social media showed demonstrators being forcibly removed from the area, sparking public outrage. In the days that followed, thousands of people joined solidarity protests in Tirana under the slogan "Albania is not for sale," calling for the project to be halted.

Environmental organizations have also called for full disclosure of documents related to the project, arguing that key decisions have not been made transparent to the public.

For more than a decade, Besjana Shehu, the conservationist and co-founder of the Albanian Ornithological Society, has worked to protect the wetlands, forests and lagoons of Pishe Poro–Narta. But she said the scenes that unfolded on May 30 marked a turning point in a much longer battle over the area's future.

"This is not simply a local dispute over a fence, a road or a construction site, but also about how decisions like this are being taken, and the lack of transparency surrounding them," she told DW.

"What is at stake is the ecological integrity of more than 18,000 hectares of one of Albania's most important natural corridors."

Rama: 'We must enter the Champions League of global tourism'

For more than an hour on Monday, Rama devoted much of a public address to the controversy surrounding the Zvernec Peninsula project.

The prime minister condemned the private security guards who were filmed dragging a protester across the sand, calling their behavior "disgusting." But his remarks left little doubt that he had no intention of stepping back from the project.

"What do I need power for if I have to abandon the vision I have shared with you all these years?" Rama asked. "We must enter the Champions League of global tourism," he said, arguing that Albania should move beyond mass tourism and compete for a more exclusive, high-end market.

Referring to the protected status of the lagoon, he argued that the area falls under a category where conservation can coexist with economic activity. Rama also stressed that the project remains in a procedural phase. According to the prime minister, no final environmental permit has yet been issued, while both the environmental impact assessment and the architectural design are still under development.

Could the the resort harm Albania's EU ambitions?


Pishe Poro–Narta is not just another protected area, and the project comes at a particularly sensitive moment for Albania's EU accession process.

The natural area has already been proposed for the Emerald Network, an ecological network based on the Bern Convention, and it is expected to become part of the Natura 2000 network once the country joins the European Union. According to the European Commission, the way the area is managed has become a test of Albania's capacity to preserve such sites as a future member state.

As part of the closing benchmarks for negotiations on environment and climate change, Albania must demonstrate its ability to protect designated habitats and prevent the deterioration of species and ecosystems.

Against this backdrop, the European Commission has said it is "closely following the developments" in Pishe Poro–Narta. In comments to DW, the commission reiterated that the repeated extension of Albania's strategic investments law "continues to raise concerns about possible environmental impacts, particularly in protected areas" and stressed that "EU standards must therefore be fully taken into account in this project."

'Last intact living delta' in the Mediterranean

Few people have followed the ecosystem more closely than Ulrich Eichelmann, head of Riverwatch and coordinator of the Save the Blue Heart of Europe campaign. He was among the leading voices behind the campaign that helped secure national park status for the Vjosa, Europe's last wild river that flows through Albania.

"The Vjosa Delta is the last intact living delta in the entire Mediterranean," he told DW.

The protected Vjosa Delta is an important stopover point for migratory birds traveling between Europe and Africa — and a magnet for coastal tourismImage: Goupi Christian/robertharding/picture alliance

Across much of the Mediterranean Sea, dams, coastal development and decades of human intervention have transformed rivers and coastlines. According to Eichelmann, the Vjosa Wild River National Park remains one of the last places where these natural processes still function largely undisturbed.

"It is a remnant, an example of how our world looked a hundred years ago," he said.

For Eichelmann, the debate ultimately raises a broader question that extends well beyond Albania's borders. "Is there anything that we don't want to destroy?" he asked. "This is something that the international community must fight for."

Edited by: Jess Smee

Rashela Shehu Albania-based reporter specializing in current affairs
US Ebola facility in Kenya fuels anger in a country with no cases

With no recorded cases of Ebola, many Kenyans are struggling to understand why their government is allowing the United States to build an Ebola facility in their country to treat US citizens. Despite protests and criticism, the Kenyan government has vowed to press on.



Issued on: 06/06/2026 - RFI

Demonstrators participate during a protest against a US-backed Ebola quarantine plan on the establishment of a facility to host Americans exposed to Ebola, in Nanyuki town, in Laikipia County, Kenya, on 1 June, 2026. REUTERS - John Muchucha

The centre at Nanyuki, near the Laikipia military base 190km north of Nairobi, is set to quarantine Americans arriving from neighbouring Democratic Republic of Congo, which is battling a major Ebola outbreak.

The facility will have 50 isolation beds and be managed by US staff. A US diplomatic source said it was nearing completion and currently had no patients.

Hundreds of Kenyans have taken to the streets in recent weeks to protest against the plan, arguing that the country should not be asked to host people exposed to a disease it has never recorded.

Public anger

"Kenya is not an American colony!" protesters chanted on Tuesday as they carried an Ebola coffin to the health ministry.

"If Ebola is too dangerous for Americans, it's also too dangerous for us," protesters from Nanyuki told RFI.

Two people were killed in central Kenya after police opened fire on Tuesday, Patrick Wahome, one of the organisers of the march, said. A security source also said two people had died but did not specify the cause of death.

There is also anger over what critics see as the neo-colonial nature of the project, with Washington refusing to allow Ebola patients into its own territory while sending them to Kenya.

A demonstrator in a protest against the US-backed Ebola quarantine plan to establish a 50-bed facility at a Kenyan air force base, in Nanyuki town, in Laikipia County, Kenya, on 1 June, 2026. REUTERS - John Muchucha


Laikipia is already home to a long-standing British army base that has brought prosperity to the area but has also been linked to incidents of rape and murder involving local women.

"The proposed establishment of the Ebola quarantine hospital in Laikipia is against the Madaraka [self-governance] principle... That is neo-colonialism," Laikipia Governor Mutula Kilonzo Junior said in a speech.

Kahura Mundia, deputy chairperson of the Kenya Medical Practitioners, Pharmacists and Dentists Union, told Citizen TV that allowing Ebola patients to travel beyond the borders of the DRC and Uganda could contribute to spreading the disease further if countries were not properly prepared.

Opposition MP Willis Evans Otieno questioned Kenya's decision to host suspected Ebola cases, saying that "the powers pushing for this arrangement will be the first to restrict our movements" if a case were detected.
Court challenge

A Kenyan court temporarily suspended the plan on 28 May following a complaint by civil society organisation Katiba Institute – a legal advocacy group.

On Tuesday, Kenya's High Court blocked the proposed facility for another three weeks, and ordered the government to disclose its agreement with Washington.

Judge Patricia Nyaundi barred the government from taking any steps to build or begin operating the facility before the case is resolved.

The judge also ordered the government to disclose all agreements and operating protocols related to the facility within seven days and scheduled the next hearing for 23 June.
The protest turned violent in Nanyuki town, in Laikipia County, Kenya, on 1 June, 2026. REUTERS - John Muchucha

Conflicting accounts

The US government says it is continuing to build the facility despite the protests and court rulings.

US military aircraft have continued flying in staff and equipment in recent days, US officials and diplomatic sources said. Data from flight-tracking website Flightradar24 showed at least nine aircraft had arrived since 24 May.

The facility is intended for Americans who have been exposed to the virus but do not have symptoms. US officials said patients who develop symptoms would be transferred to other countries for treatment.

Health Minister Aden Duale told parliament on Wednesday that the centre would go ahead and would serve both Kenyans and Americans, rejecting claims that it would be exclusive.

"Quarantine is not only for Americans. Even Kenyans will be isolated at the facility," Duale said. "Laikipia air base is one of the 23 quarantine isolation centres we are building. And we will not stop it."
Disputed purpose

However, a US official speaking on condition of anonymity told Reuters the facility would only treat US citizens.

During a state visit to South Africa on Thursday, President William Ruto defended the decision to allow the US to build the centre.

"It would be most unfortunate if on one request by the Americans to set up a facility at their cost, we would refuse, we would look very inhuman," he told a press conference.

The US intends to provide $13.5 million for Kenya's Ebola preparedness efforts.

The outbreak of the rare Bundibugyo strain of Ebola is centred in eastern Congo and several cases have spread into neighbouring Uganda.

There have been at least 344 confirmed Ebola cases in Congo, including 48 deaths, and 116 suspected cases, according to the World Health Organization. Uganda has recorded at least 15 confirmed cases.

(with newswires)


How disinformation in Congo is worsening Ebola epidemic
DW
06/05/2026

The deadly Ebola outbreak isn't the only thing causing concern for health workers in Congo. Rumors and disinformation are hindering efforts to contain the virus. The patterns are well-known — and could be confronted.


Even though people are dying from Ebola, many in Mongbwalu still don't believe in the disease
Image: Gradel Muyisa Mumbere/REUTERS


Three weeks since the start of the latest Ebola epidemic in the Democratic Republic of Congo, there have been 397 confirmed cases, including 63 confirmed deaths, according to the latest figures reported by the African Union's Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention.

And yet: "The community does not believe in this disease. Despite the deaths, people don't believe in it," said John Tumujimbe, head of a team for dignified and safe burials in the small town of Mongbwalu, one of the epicenters of the Ebola epidemic in the Congo's northeastern Ituri province.

"We initially thought of malaria, typhoid or diarrheal diseases," Tumujimbe said. "But, after so many deaths, we sent samples to the INRB."

The INRB — Congo's National Institute for Biomedical Research in the capital, Kinshasa — confirmed that these were indeed cases of Ebola. This led health officials to announce the 17th Ebola epidemic to be recorded in Congo since the virus was first discovered in 1976.


Ebola rumors lead to arson attacks


But health officials say many residents in Mongbwalu rejected this scientific answer.

"When there were the first deaths, there was talk that the coffins were a problem, that it spread from there," said one Mongbwalu resident, who did not want to be named.

Tumujimbe also heard this rumor. "That's how it started: people talked about a coffin that kills people. And then more people died."

Another rumor: Aid workers and paramedics were spreading the virus via the antennas of their vehicles.

At the end of May, an angry crowd gathered at Mongbwalu's general hospital. They demanded that authorities return the bodies of their deceased, eventually setting fire to a tent belonging to the aid organization Doctors Without Borders. The organization had to withdraw its staff.

"There was a panic," hospital director Richard Lokudi told DW. "This allowed several suspected cases to escape. Eighteen patients who were under observation have disappeared."

The health workers worry suspected Ebola patients could have passed the disease on to the people who were sheltering them. There is still no vaccine for the Bundibugyo variant of the Ebola virus now circulating.

Familiar rumors blunt Ebola response


Christopher Nehring specializes in researching disinformation, and co-authored a report on the current Ebola epidemic for the Konrad Adenauer Foundation. He said similar rumors pop up in every health emergency.

"They say the disease comes from the lab as a bioweapon; that the vaccination is more harmful than the virus; that there is a simple cure that is being concealed; that the disease is not real. Big Pharma is mentioned either as the profiteer of the crisis or as the ones who originated it," Nehring told DW.

"It's all been known for decades. And it varies, there are 100 different variations of these narratives."

For the report, Nehring sought information from Congolese fact checkers. One of them is Ange Kasongo, founder of Balobaki Check, based in Kinshasa. Talking with DW, she recalled conversations she had with miners — gold mining is important for the economy in the province of Ituri.

"They said that the rumors and myths about death were circulating, but that the people there didn't believe them," Kasongo said.

The explanation she was given went: "If a trader wants to earn or mine a lot of gold, he may also resort to mystical acts to eliminate his competitors."

This suggests that economic pressure is also preventing the epidemic from being dealt with openly.

Kasongo highlights another rumor: Private messages circulating on WhatsApp have claimed a conspiracy between Congolese President Felix Tshisekedi and renowned virologist Jean-Jacques Muyembe — who discovered the virus 50 years ago — to wipe out the population in eastern Congo


The Balobaki Check team was unable to find any supporting evidence of this claim.


Without reliable media, disinformation spreads easily

The global community is making significantly less money available for emergency aid measures, which makes fighting Ebola harder.

US President Donald Trump withdrew the United States from the World Health Organization in 2025, and ordered massive cuts to USAID and the crisis management program at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

European governments have also cut funding, partly due to the cost of militarization efforts in the wake of the war in Ukraine.



For Nehring, this situation has also encouraged the spread of fake news. "If the money for health aid has already been cut, then you can't talk about bigger budgets for health communication either," said Nehring.

Nevertheless, Ange Kasongo pointed out the authorities were making every effort to communicate clearly. But she also told DW this had its limits. "How can we ensure that information is passed on orally — not just in French, not just in the four national languages?"

According to Kasongo, it;s important to get community leaders on board and give them access to reliable information.


Rachidi Kudra contributed reporting.

This article was originally written in German.

Philipp Sandner Editor



Inside DR Congo’s Ebola Fight: Faith, Fear, And Trust



Health teams in personal protective equipment (PPE) respond to the Ebola outbreak in eastern DR Congo. Photo Credit: WHO/Joël Lumbala

June 6, 2026 
 UN News
By Vibhu Mishra and Cristina Silveiro

In a village in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), health workers arrived a few days ago to help bury a person who had died from Ebola. Instead, they were threatened, told armed rebels would be called if they stayed, and forced to leave.

The family carried out the burial themselves – potentially exposing dozens more people to the virus.

The incident offers a stark illustration of one of the biggest obstacles facing efforts to contain the latest deadly epidemic, which has infected 381 people and claimed 64 lives in DRC as of 3 June.


For Marie Roseline Belizaire, the World Health Organization’s (WHO) Emergency Preparedness and Response Director for Africa, the most challenging part is not always the virus itself – it can be sitting with families who believe the disease is caused by witchcraft, persuading traditional healers to work alongside health teams or health teams returning to communities that threatened them – only days earlier.

“We are not trying to overcome their culture,” she said. “We’re trying to involve the science in their own belief.”

Progress, but not yet control

The outbreak, caused by the rare Bundibugyo strain of Ebola virus – for which there is no vaccine or treatment – continues to spread in eastern DRC while cases have also been reported across the border in Uganda.

Speaking to UN News from Bunia, in Ituri province, Dr. Belizaire said the response has made significant gains in recent weeks, particularly in testing capacity.

At the start of the outbreak, laboratories could process about 40 tests a day. That capacity has now expanded to 800 daily tests, allowing suspected cases to be confirmed or ruled out much more quickly.

“All the tests that we are receiving, we are rolling them out at the same day, almost,” she said. “The time to expect your result has been reduced. Twenty-four, maximum 48 hours you have the result.”

Community alerts are first investigated in the field, with those meeting the outbreak’s case definition tested and either confirmed or ruled out – allowing suspected cases to be cleared from the system more quickly than at the start of the outbreak.

Firmer trace

Contact tracing rates have improved from around 25 per cent to 45 per cent, but that remains far below the 90 to 95 per cent coverage needed to effectively contain transmission.

“We still have a lot of challenges,” she said, adding that the outbreak’s regional dimensions remain a concern.

Uganda has recorded 15 confirmed cases and one probable case linked to the outbreak. One Congolese national also travelled through the United Arab Emirates before arriving in Uganda, highlighting how quickly infectious diseases can move across borders.

“When there is an outbreak and you have mobility, it is always a concern,” Dr. Belizaire said, stressing however that mechanisms such as WHO’s International Health Regulations help countries share information rapidly and coordinate responses.
Trust in public health

For WHO teams on the ground, one of the most complex tasks is building trust. Many communities in affected areas have experienced years of conflict and insecurity. Cultural beliefs and misinformation can also shape how people interpret illness and death.

“The disease symptoms are very malaria-like in the community,” Dr. Belizaire explained.


Some families attribute deaths to witchcraft or poisoning rather than infection.

Health workers therefore focus on coexistence rather than confrontation.

“We don’t stop them to believe in witchcraft, to believe any other things in their culture,” she said. “We just ask them to simultaneously believe in the disease existence also.”
Ancient and modern

Traditional healers are also being engaged as partners rather than excluded.

“We don’t stop them going to traditional healers,” she said. “We ask [the healers], if you see someone with those symptoms, refer it also to us.”

The approach reflects lessons learned from previous Ebola outbreaks, where mistrust often proved as dangerous as the virus itself.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, who recently visited the outbreak’s epicentre, warned that “misinformation is almost as dangerous as the virus itself, and spreads just as fast.”
Reasons for hope

Despite the difficulties, there have been encouraging signs. Seven people have recovered from Ebola, including six healthcare workers.

Most sought treatment early and received intensive supportive care, including rehydration and treatment for symptoms while their immune systems fought the infection.

“They recovered because they went early to the hospital,” Dr. Belizaire said.
Candidate vaccines under development

There is currently no licensed vaccine or approved treatment for the Bundibugyo strain, although candidate vaccines are under development.

But Dr. Belizaire stressed that even a vaccine would not replace the need for early detection and treatment.

“The key is, as soon as you have symptoms, you go to the healthcare centre,” she said.
A survivor’s determination

Among the encounters that have stayed with Dr. Belizaire most is that of a healthcare worker who contracted Ebola while caring for a patient. The female medic later recovered.

Rather than leaving the profession, she said she intends to continue serving others.

“She said she will not stop,” Dr. Belizaire recalled. “She said she was born to give care to others, and it is what she will continue doing.”


That story reflects the resilience of health workers and communities confronting the outbreak every day.

U.S. warns Ebola outbreak on scale of largest ‘is possible’


Doctors Without Borders (MSF) personnel prepare for Ebola treatment in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo
Doctors Without Borders (MSF) personnel prepare for Ebola treatment in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo – Copyright AFP GLODY MURHABAZI

The U.S. CDC on Friday urged strong public health interventions against the current Ebola outbreak, citing their models that show it could otherwise rival the scale of the 2014 West Africa outbreak.

That eruption of the virus resulted in more than 28,000 cases and more than 11,000 deaths.

“That scale is possible,” said Jason Asher, director of CDC’s Center for Forecasting and Outbreak Analytics, during a press briefing.

The US projections from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention were part of Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report documents published Friday.

The worst outcomes could be avoided if “a larger proportion of patients were identified, isolated, and treated,” the agency said in its reports.

But “the public health response to control this outbreak will likely need to be of similar magnitude to the response for the 2014-2016 West Africa Ebola outbreak.”

Asher emphasized the models were “not a forecast” but “a planning tool.”

“They’re designed to support action, not to generate alarm.”

They are based on four possible intervention scenarios ranging from poor (20 percent) to extremely high (95 percent) levels of isolation and treatment.

If isolation levels are what the CDC would consider poor, with no other interventions there is a 65 percent chance cases will top 20,000 within three months, according to the agency.

Satish Pillai, the CDC manager for the Ebola response, said “the total individuals that are infected and requiring isolation remains unclear.”

But he said the situation on the ground would indicate levels of isolation are currently on the lower end.

Also on Friday the World Health Organization and the African Union’s public health agency said $518 million was needed across the next six months to combat the deadly Ebola outbreak in the DR Congo and its neighbors.

The outbreak was declared on May 15 in northeastern DR Congo, but the rare Bundibugyo species of the Ebola virus is believed to have spread for some time beforehand.

According to the WHO’s latest figures, there are 381 confirmed cases in the DRC, including 64 deaths.

The outbreak has hit three provinces, with the epicenter in Ituri, which the Africa CDC says accounts for 90 percent of confirmed cases and 76 percent of confirmed deaths.

Across the northeastern border in Uganda, there have been 16 confirmed cases, including one death.

Seven Ebola patients in the DRC and two in Uganda have recovered.



As Ebola Virus Spreads, We See the Terrifying Effects of Trump Dismantling USAID


Trump slashed more than 30 CDC experts and 140 USAID staff who managed the 2018 Ebola outbreak on the ground in the DRC.

June 4, 2026

Health care workers put on personal protective equipment before going to examine patients at the Ebola Treatment Center in Munigi, Democratic Republic of the Congo, on June 2, 2026.Jospin Mwisha / AFP via Getty Images

In 2018, when the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) experienced a severe Ebola outbreak, more than 30 experts from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), close to 20 disaster-response specialists from the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), and 120 additional USAID staff were on the ground attempting to manage the outbreak, according to estimates from Friends of USAID, an advocacy organization mainly made up of ex-USAID staffers. With that level of staffing in 2018, by and large, they succeeded in limiting the extent to which the disease spread.

This year, as a particularly virulent strain of the Ebola virus — the Bundibugyo strain, against which there is no approved vaccine and for which there are no medicinal cures — runs rampant in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Friends of USAID estimate there is only one CDC staffer on the ground there, along with five additional State Department personnel. There are of course no USAID workers present, since the Trump administration dismantled USAID during the purges led by the so-called “Department of Government Efficiency” (DOGE) in 2025, summarily firing local health care contractors around the world, including in countries with extreme poverty rates such as the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

In addition, since Donald Trump signed an executive order pulling the U.S. out of the World Health Organization in early 2025 — a pullout that was completed in January of this year — CDC experts are no longer allowed to communicate with World Health Organization personnel. And despite a waiver having been granted for Ebola-related correspondence, in practice there has been a significant breakdown in communication between the two agencies over the past year — a breakdown promoted by the Trump administration, which recently sent out an email reminder to CDC staff not to correspond with the World Health Organization.

The consequences have already been devastating. In past Ebola outbreaks, even before mass testing of disease victims got underway, the CDC and USAID were able to tell when an epidemic was picking up steam based on on-the-ground medical observations and data about excess mortality figures. And, in response, they were able to position medical resources effectively.

In the current outbreak, the decimated remnants of the CDC were caught unawares, only finding out about the outbreak once hundreds, and possibly thousands, of people had already been infected — thus making it far more likely that this outbreak will prove particularly difficult to corral.


Trump Admin Cuts to USAID, WHO, Likely Stalled Response to Ebola, Experts Warn
“Facilities in affected areas are operating without basic protective supplies” due to cuts to USAID, one expert said. By Chris Walker , Truthout May 26, 2026


Because so many experts have been fired over the past 16 months, and because political overseers have been limiting what the remaining scientists can say and write, “the CDC is not really functional anymore,” Angela Rasmussen, professor of virology at the University of Saskatchewan in Canada, told Truthout. Rasmussen, who also serves as science chair for the Save America Movement, a nonpartisan organization that works to stop ongoing assaults on public health, added that the administration was no longer bothering to consult remaining CDC experts when making policy to respond to the outbreak. “It used to be an evidence-driven process and now it’s a political-driven process,” Rasmussen said.


“I equate it to having the mayor’s office taking on a fire without having a fire department or a fire hose.”

“I equate it to having the mayor’s office taking on a fire without having a fire department or a fire hose,” Demetre Daskalakis, former director of the CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, told Truthout. Daskalakis, who resigned last August because he was so concerned about the direction that the Department of Health and Human Services was taking under Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s leadership, says that when faced with grave public health challenges, the administration is simply resorting to “a lot of posturing, with, I think, bad consequences.”

Faced with the twin public health emergencies of the Ebola virus outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda, alongside the hantavirus outbreak on a cruise ship from which people disembarked to the four corners of the Earth, the Trump administration’s response has been, at best, ad hoc. Instead of implementing expert-driven protocols, it has leaned on its nativist instincts to simply attempt to lock the virus out. That attempt proved a colossal failure during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic. And, according to Rasmussen and Daskalakis, the signs are not auspicious for it being a successful strategy against the global health crises of 2026.

For U.S. residents exposed to hantavirus, the Trump administration has ordered mandatory 42-day quarantines in a secure facility in Omaha, Nebraska — despite the fact that experts say the virus doesn’t spread easily and that home quarantine would be just as effective. For U.S. residents exposed to the Ebola virus in Africa, the response has been to refuse them entry back into the United States and to instead have them isolated and, if need be, treated in Kenya — a situation that Rasmussen and other experts say makes little sense given the huge investments made over the past decade in secure biocontainment units in the U.S. “They’re throwing evidence-based risk assessment out the window, and are trampling people’s 14th Amendment rights,” Rasmussen told Truthout. “If we’re going to take Americans’ freedom away, there should be a real basis for that — and there’s not.”

Telling people in the U.S. that if they get exposed to the Ebola virus, they won’t be allowed back into their home country for months is, experts believe, a surefire way to discourage U.S. doctors and public health professionals from heading to Africa to try to contain the outbreak. In other words, it is a strategy all but guaranteed to make a bad situation worse.

“It took so long for the CDC to say anything about hantavirus or to hear from the DRC about Ebola. Relationships that took decades to build have simply disappeared.”

At the same time, African victims of the disease, who could certainly benefit from access to the treatment center being established in Kenya, are being deliberately excluded from it. “There’s an equity issue,” Daskalakis says of this policy. This, too, will end up hurting public health, as the Ebola patients denied access to the Kenyan facility will, in all likelihood, end up spreading the disease further in their communities or in poorly resourced medical facilities to which some eventually may turn.

Aryn Backus, a CDC employee who has been on administrative leave for more than a year since her job was targeted by DOGE, and who is now deputy executive director of the National Public Health Coalition, told Truthout that the ham-handed U.S. response to the outbreak overseas makes it more likely that the disease will ultimately find its way to the United States. “Diseases don’t understand borders,” she said. And, without detailed international coordination, the likelihood of their spreading far and wide grows.

“We are seemingly not at the table anymore,” Daskalakis added, as he detailed the myriad ways that the U.S.’s role as global public health leader has been corroded. “It took so long for the CDC to say anything about hantavirus or to hear from the DRC about Ebola. Relationships that took decades to build have simply disappeared.”


Hantavirus: Argentina expands probe to trace outbreak source
DW, AFP, AP
06/06/2026 

Experts say tracing passenger movements before and after boarding the ship is critical to preventing the virus from spreading [FILE: May 18, 2026]Image: Mouneb Taim/Anadolu/picture alliance

Argentine and US scientists will test rodents in Mendoza as investigators try to trace the source of a hantavirus outbreak that killed three people.

Argentina is expanding its investigation into the source of a deadly hantavirus outbreak in April to the western province of Mendoza, the Health Ministry said on Friday.

Hantavirus is a rare rodent-borne illness that has multiple strains of varying severity.

The outbreak aboard the cruise ship MV Hondius is linked to the Andes hantavirus strain, endemic to parts of Argentina and Chile, though not in Mendoza.

It infected at least 11 people aboard the ship, killing three, after it departed from the southern Argentine city of Ushuaia in April.

Scientists reconstructing how the virus spread

Authorities said scientists from Argentina's leading center for infectious diseases, the Malbran Institute, and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would conduct field studies in the city of Malargue, Mendoza, from June 8-12.

Argentine scientists, along with experts from the CDC, will trap and test rodents to trace the origin.

Laboratory analysis is also continuing on more than 100 rodents captured in Ushuaia and Tierra del Fuego last month.

Investigators are trying to reconstruct how the virus spread, including tracing the movements of a Dutch couple believed to be among the first infected.

They had travelled through Argentina and Chile before boarding the cruise.

The MV Hondius was sailing from Ushuaia in Argentina to Cape Verde when its journey was disrupted following the outbreak.

Experts suspect exposure to infected rodent droppings or urine caused the outbreak.
WHO says no pandemic threat

Officials said it may never be possible to determine the exact origin of the outbreak, but tracing the chain of transmission would help to understand the spread and management of the disease.

Ushuaia authorities have rejected suggestions the virus originated there, saying that Tierra del Fuego has not recorded a hantavirus case in three decades.

Although the Andes hantavirus has a mortality rate of up to 30% and no approved treatment or vaccine, the World Health Organization (WHO) has said the outbreak does not pose a pandemic threat.

Edited by: Rana Taha
Shakeel Sobhan Covering politics, social, and environmental issues in India.

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Debate in Germany after Wim Wenders pulls film over child nudity

04.06.2026, DPA

German director Wim Wenders - German director Wim Wenders attends the German Film Award ceremony. (is associated with: «Debate in Germany after Wim Wenders pulls film over child nudity»)

Photo: Sebastian Gollnow/dpa

By dpa correspondents

The decision by German director Wim Wenders to withdraw a 1975 film over a nude scene depicting a 13-year-old has sparked widespread debate in Germany on whether artworks should be changed retroactively, with some industry figures hailing the moment as a "big opportunity."

The controversial scene in the 1975 film "Wrong Move," a modern adaption of a novel by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, features then 13-year-old actress Nastassja Kinski with a bare upper body.

Kinski, now 65, has said that she had asked Wenders for years to remove the 2-minute scene.

Wenders publicly apologized to Kinski in a statement released on Wednesday, announcing that he would withdraw the film from distribution until "a mutually agreed solution" was found.

Reacting to the move, the German Film Academy said on Thursday it would hold a meeting in September to address the issues raised by Wenders' decision.

Academy presidents Vicky Krieps and Florian Gallenberger noted the question inherent in Wenders' decision - whether films and other works of art should, must or are permitted to be altered after their release - had sparked “intense debate” not only in the public sphere but also within the institution.

It would take time to consider the legal, ethic, artistic and cultural dimensions in equal measure, meaning a decision on how the academy would deal with the film in the future should be expected following the meeting in September at the earliest, they said.

German director Julia von Heinz, who described Wenders' move as a "big opportunity" for the industry in an op-ed for Germany's Süddeutsche Zeitung daily, noted that her colleague had several options to deal with the scene.

Wenders could either grant Kinski her request and remove it, she said, or provide a “softer form of reparation” by creating supplementary material and allowing Kinski to contribute an interview or essay to be distributed alongside the film.

Von Heinz argued that Wenders' concern over the film's legacy could only be explained with a concept of genius “which assumes that a film is created frame by frame – that is, shot by shot – and that this form is the only true one and must not be altered.”

Yet films are often the result of chance, she wrote.

In his statement from Wednesday, Wenders writes that "it is necessary for our society to find appropriate ways of dealing with controversial film works from the 20th Century and to face new learning processes and inclusive perspectives regarding cinema."

He also said that he would seek dialogue with film institutions and other industry figures on the issue.

Before Wenders' announcement, Kinski's lawyer Christian Schertz had said that the acclaimed director had “refused for years” to discuss the scene with his client in person and announced that she would take legal action.

Schertz welcomed Wenders' decision to withdraw the film, while describing it as "long overdue."

"I also regret that this only came about as a result of public pressure, after he had initially tried to shift the blame in his speech at the German Film Awards and indirectly dismissed Nastassja Kinski’s request as censorship, which was truly despicable."

The 80-year-old director, whose films include "Paris, Texas," "Wings of Desire," and "Perfect Days," used his acceptance speech at the German Film Awards, where he received an honorary award last week, to call for a broader discussion about how the film industry should handle controversial scenes in older works.

Referring to the controversy linked to "Wrong Move," Wenders said he would not shoot the scene the same way today. However, he said he was "at a loss" as to how to deal with films made in a different era, as cutting the scene would set a precedent for all films to come.

Prague's Václav Havel Library on the brink of closure

05.06.2026, 13:28 Uhr

The renowned Václav Havel Library in Prague is facing closure following the withdrawal of several sponsors and a change in the stance of the widow of the former Czechoslovak and Czech president who gave the library its name.

Speaking to the CTK news agency on Friday, Václav Havel's widow, Dagmar Havlová said she no longer had the strength to continue supporting the project, despite always having believed in its objectives. 

Havlová's withdrawal caps a period of escalating tensions within the institution. This culminated in the resignation last month of the entire staff in protest against the allegedly chaotic management style of Tomáš Sedláček, who has been director since March 2025.

Sedláček, a 49-year-old economist who won acclaim for his 2011 book "The Economics of Good and Evil," has refused to step down despite the departure of the staff.

Final rescue attempts

The remaining members of the library's supervisory and administrative board say they will still seek a solution to the crisis. This could prove difficult, as Havlová holds the rights to her late husband's name.

Modelled on US presidential libraries, the library was founded in 2004 while Havel was still alive. As well as housing a large archive, it also serves as a vibrant venue for political and social debates.

The playwright and civil rights activist Havel, who died in 2011, became the first freely elected president of what was then Czechoslovakia following the democratic transition of 1989.

Following the peaceful separation from Slovakia in 1993, he became the first president of the new Czech Republic and remained in office until February 2003. He is known for plays such as "The Garden Party" and an extensive body of essays.