Kampala (AFP)

The nine-year-old Congolese girl, who was tested positive Thursday for the Ebola virus in Uganda from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), died Friday morning, health sources said.

"She died around 8:00 am (0500 GMT) this morning," Yusuf Baseka, director of health services for Kasese District, southwestern Uganda told AFP.

The child was in isolation in a health center in Bwera, in the same district of Kasese. The body of the girl "is being repatriated" in the DRC, with his mother who accompanied him, said Mr. Baseka.

"I want to reassure all Ugandans and non-Ugandans that we have the full capacity to control Ebola, stay calm and vigilant," said Ugandan Minister of Health Jane Ruth Aceng before the announcement of the death of girl.

She is the fourth person diagnosed with Ebola in Uganda to die.

In June, three family members diagnosed in Uganda, after contracting the disease in the DRC, died. Two died on Ugandan soil and the third in the DRC after being repatriated.

In late July, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared Uganda free from Ebola, with no other cases reported in the meantime.

The dead child Friday arrived at the Mpondwe crossing point on the DRC-Uganda border on Wednesday to seek medical help in Bwera, according to the Ugandan Ministry of Health.

In Mpondwe, where Uganda has sanitary controls in place, medical teams have noted that Ebola-like symptoms include fever, generalized weakness, rash and unexplained blood loss in the mouth. , according to the same source.

Blood tests confirmed Thursday that she was "Ebola positive". The Ministry pointed out that since it had been controlled at the border, it had not come into contact with anyone in Uganda.

Ebola haemorrhagic fever, highly contagious, causes the death of between 25 and 90% of patients, according to the WHO. There is no commercialized treatment or vaccine, but several leads are being tested. It is spread through direct contact with blood, body secretions (sweat, stool, etc.), through sexual intercourse and through the improper handling of contaminated cadavers.

A total of 2,006 people have died of Ebola in the DRC in a year, and Ugandan authorities, who fear the virus is spreading in their country, have taken strict preventive measures.

Nearly 18,000 people cross the border between the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda daily, according to Ugandan government figures.

© 2019 AFP