Ground Zero for Zika virus: disease was first discovered in Uganda, where locals appear to have developed resistance
There is no vaccine against Zika, which top US health authorities described on Thursday as a “brand new” virus that has expanded swiftly in recent years and been linked to brain damage in babies.

Down winding paths through dense jungles, Gerald Mukisa kicks up the dry leaves noisily with his feet to provide warning sounds, noting that the late afternoon heat is “snake time”.
The forest is calm. Only the sound of insects, birds and the rustle of monkeys in the jungle canopy above disturb the air.
It was here in the thick woodland of Zika forest, some 25km from Uganda’s capital Kampala, that the mosquito-borne Zika virus was first discovered in 1947.
The virus, linked to a surge in birth defects, is “spreading explosively”, World Health Organisation chief Margaret Chan said this week. An emergency meeting on the outbreak is due on February 1.
Mukisa, who has worked to guard the forest for the past seven years, only found out about the virus that takes its name two weeks ago.
“People who live nearby the forest and have heard about it are getting worried,” he said. “Many others don’t know about it.”