The United Kingdom is dispatching medical experts to the Democratic Republic of Congo as the country battles a fresh Ebola outbreak, sources confirm. The move comes as patients begin to recover from the virus, with British officials touting the NHS's hard-won experience in handling infectious diseases.
Documents obtained by this newspaper show that a team of specialists from Public Health England and NHS trusts will deploy to the affected regions within days. Their mission: to train local healthcare workers in infection control, contact tracing, and safe burials. The UK government has pledged an initial package worth £5 million, including protective equipment and rapid diagnostic kits.
But critics question whether Britain is exporting lessons learned from its own pandemic fumbles. The NHS, lauded for its containment of Ebola cases in 2014 and 2015, has since been stretched thin by COVID-19. A whistleblower inside the Department of Health told me that while the offer is genuine, the timing reeks of political expediency. "They want to look like global leaders while the NHS queues grow," they said.
DR Congo's health ministry reported 12 cases, including three deaths, in the latest outbreak centred around the city of Beni. The World Health Organization has warned of potential spread across the border, given the region's porous boundaries and active conflict zones. British experts will work alongside Médecins Sans Frontières and the Congolese Red Cross.
One NHS doctor who volunteered for the mission told me off the record: "We learned the hard way that hospitals can become epicentres. The stakes are lower here in terms of numbers, but the conditions are brutal. No running water, no electricity. This is where the real test happens."
The UK's offer also includes sharing digital tools used during the NHS's COVID response: an app for tracking potential exposures and a system for managing quarantine facilities. However, sceptics note that the same technology was criticised for data privacy breaches at home.
This is not charity. It's about preventing a crisis that could land on our shores. The same viruses travel. And the same mistakes can be repeated. I will be watching where that £5 million goes.
For now, the patients who are recovering are the lucky ones. The rest depend on whether Britain's expertise arrives before the next wave of bodies.










