Congo confirms two Ebola cases unrelated to West African epidemic
Congolese health minister confirms two patients have deadly virus as death toll climbs above 1,400

The Democratic Republic of Congo confirmed its two first cases of Ebola this year, but claimed they were unrelated to the epidemic raging in four countries of West Africa.
In Kinshasa, Congolese Health Minister Felix Kabange Numbi said that two of eight samples taken from victims of a mystery fever had tested positive for Ebola.
“The results are positive. The Ebola virus is confirmed in DRC,” Kabange said.
Speaking later on public television, he said the confirmation marked the seventh outbreak of Ebola in Congo, where the virus was first identified in 1976 near the Ebola River.
But he said the two new cases had “no link to the epidemic raging in West Africa” and were different strains from one another.
Authorities immediately imposed a quarantine around the affected area in Equateur province near Jera, more than 1,200km northeast of the Congolese capital Kinshasa.