Ebola

No vaccine for latest Ebola outbreak, DRC warns as as toll hits 80

  • "The Bundibugyo strain has no vaccine, no specific treatment," DR Congo's Health Minister Samuel-Roger Kamba said Saturday.
  • An Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo that has caused at least 80 deaths has a "very high lethality rate" and no vaccine or specific treatment, the country's health minister warned Saturday.
  • "The Bundibugyo strain has no vaccine, no specific treatment," DR Congo's Health Minister Samuel-Roger Kamba said Saturday.
An Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo that has caused at least 80 deaths has a "very high lethality rate" and no vaccine or specific treatment, the country's health minister warned Saturday.
Nearly 250 suspected cases of the the highly contagious haemorrhagic fever have been recorded in DR Congo, according to the health ministry, with one death reported in neighbouring Uganda.
Medical aid group Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said it was preparing a "large-scale response", calling the rapid spread of the outbreak "extremely concerning".
"The Bundibugyo strain has no vaccine, no specific treatment," DR Congo's Health Minister Samuel-Roger Kamba said Saturday.
"This strain has a very high lethality rate which can reach 50 percent."
Earlier Saturday, ministry officials said the death toll had reached 80, up from 65 the previous day.
The strain has also claimed one life in neighbouring Uganda, officials said Saturday, that of a Congolese national.
That correlated with an announcement late Friday by Uganda's health ministry, which said a 59-year-old man from the DRC had died in Kampala after being admitted earlier in the week. His body was repatriated the same day. 
Tests showed the victim in Uganda was infected with the Bundibugyo strain of Ebola, first identified in 2007.
Vaccines are only available for the Zaire strain, which was identified in 1976 and has a higher fatality rate of 60-90 percent.
Health officials had confirmed the latest outbreak Friday in Ituri province in northeastern DR Congo, bordering Uganda and South Sudan, according to the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC Africa). 
Adding to concerns of spread are significant cross-border population movements in the region affected.
According to Kamba, patient zero was a nurse who reported to a health facility in provincial capital Bunia on April 24, with symptoms suggesting Ebola.
Symptoms of the disease include fever, haemorrhaging and vomiting.
MSF said it was mobilising medical, logistical and support staff to help respond to the outbreak.
"The number of cases and deaths we are seeing in such a short timeframe, combined with the spread across several health zones and now across the border, is extremely concerning,” says Trish Newport, MSF Emergency Programme Manager.

High risk of spread

It is the 17th Ebola outbreak to hit DR Congo, and officials warned of a high risk of spread.
The country's health ministry said overnight the number of fatalities had risen to "246 suspected cases notified and 80 deaths".
"It is a large outbreak," said Jay Bhattacharya, acting director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Friday.
The previous outbreak of Ebola, which has killed some 15,000 people in Africa over the past 50 years, despite advances in vaccines and treatment, was last August in the central region.
That episode killed at least 34 people, before being declared eradicated in December.
Nearly 2,300 people died in the deadliest outbreak in the DRC between 2018 and 2020.
Ebola, believed to have originated in bats, is a deadly viral disease spread through direct contact with bodily fluids. It can cause severe bleeding and organ failure.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), outbreaks over the past half century have seen a mortality rate among those affected of between 25 percent and 90 percent.
The virus spreads from person to person through bodily fluids or exposure to the blood of an infected persons, who become contagious only once they display symptoms. The incubation period can last up to 21 days.
"Given the uncertainties and severity of the illness,  there is concern about the scale of  transmission in affected communities," the WHO said Friday as it prepared to airlift five tonnes of material including infection prevention gear from Kinshasa.
Large-scale transport of medical equipment is a challenge in DR Congo, a country of more than 100 million people which is four times the size of France but has poor communications infrastructure.
burs-pdw/rmb

ebola

New deadly Ebola outbreak hits DR Congo, 1 dead in Uganda

BY DYLAN GAMBA

  • The current Ebola outbreak is the 17th in the DRC since the virus was first detected in the country.
  • A new outbreak of the deadly Ebola virus has been declared in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, African health officials said Friday, with neighbouring Uganda also confirming one related death.
  • The current Ebola outbreak is the 17th in the DRC since the virus was first detected in the country.
A new outbreak of the deadly Ebola virus has been declared in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, African health officials said Friday, with neighbouring Uganda also confirming one related death.
Until now, the outbreak had been confined to Ituri province in northeastern DRC, bordering Uganda and South Sudan, according to the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC Africa). 
It warned of a high risk of spread, with 246 suspected cases and 65 deaths reported in the DRC. 
On Friday evening, Uganda's health ministry said a 59-year-old man from the DRC had died in Kampala after being admitted earlier in the week. His body was repatriated the same day. 
"This is an imported case from DRC. The country has not yet confirmed a local case," the ministry said. 
Tests showed the man was infected with the Bundibugyo strain of Ebola, for which no vaccine exists. Vaccines are only available for the Zaire strain, which is the deadliest variant.
"It is a large outbreak," said Jay Bhattacharya, acting director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
The DRC government has not yet commented on the outbreak in the vast central African nation of more than 100 million people.
"The region where it is happening is highly volatile with the humanitarian situation" and cross-border population movements, said WHO emergency alert and response director Abdi Rahman Mahamud.
But he noted the country has extensive experience managing Ebola outbreaks.
"With the insecurity, people are crowded together in the city, and since there are so many people in the city, an epidemic like this would be very serious," Anne-Marie Dive, a resident of Bunia, the main city in Ituri, said by telephone.

Suspected cases

Mining in the gold-rich Ituri province creates an intense movement of people on a daily basis.
For years, it has been plagued by recurrent clashes driven by local militias, making it difficult to access certain parts of the province for security reasons.
The cases reported in recent weeks were in Mongbwalu and Rwampara health zones, each home to around 150,000 people.
Suspected cases have been detected in Bunia, which has an estimated population of 300,000, and are awaiting confirmation, CDC Africa said.
The highly contagious haemorrhagic fever has killed an estimated 15,000 people in Africa over the past 50 years, despite advances in vaccines and treatment.
The last outbreak in the country was in August in the central region and killed at least 34 people, before being declared eradicated in December.
Nearly 2,300 people died in the deadliest outbreak in the DRC between 2018 and 2020.
First identified in 1976 and believed to have originated in bats, Ebola is a deadly viral disease spread through direct contact with bodily fluids. It can cause severe bleeding and organ failure.
- 'We just dug graves' - 
Burials have already taken place and concern is mounting among locals.
"For the past few weeks, the municipality of Mongbwalu has been recording a cascade of deaths, with at least five to six people dying every day in the streets," Gloire Mumbesa, who lives in the area, told AFP by telephone.
"We just dug graves to bury three people, but we don't actually know what these people died of. We're starting to be afraid of every possible case of illness," Salama Bamunoba, a civil society member in Rwampara, said.
A health source in the Mongbwalu area, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said an "exponential" number of deaths had been seen since mid-April.
Patients are currently placed in isolation in health centres but the staff lack equipment including protective gear, the source said.
In a country four times the size of France, delivering medicines is often a challenge, with transportation infrastructure limited and often in poor condition.
The current Ebola outbreak is the 17th in the DRC since the virus was first detected in the country.
Guinea, Uganda and Sierra Leone have also seen Ebola outbreaks in recent years.
burs-cld/rh/phz

health

NZ passenger from hantavirus cruise quarantines in Taiwan

  • Health authorities have repeatedly emphasised that the broader risk to public health from the outbreak of the Andes strain of hantavirus -- the only one known to spread between people -- is low.
  • A New Zealand passenger from the hantavirus-stricken MV Hondius cruise ship is in hospital quarantine in Taiwan, Taiwanese health authorities said on Friday.
  • Health authorities have repeatedly emphasised that the broader risk to public health from the outbreak of the Andes strain of hantavirus -- the only one known to spread between people -- is low.
A New Zealand passenger from the hantavirus-stricken MV Hondius cruise ship is in hospital quarantine in Taiwan, Taiwanese health authorities said on Friday.
The person, who has tested negative for the rare disease and is showing no symptoms, arrived in Taiwan on May 7 after disembarking from the cruise ship in Saint Helena on April 24.
New Zealand authorities told Taiwan's Centers for Disease Control (CDC) on Wednesday that the person was in Taiwan, CDC spokeswoman Tseng Shu-hui said.
The person was admitted to hospital the same day and will remain there until June 6, Tseng told AFP. 
Tseng declined to provide details about the person's age, gender or current location in Taiwan. 
"At present, we believe their probability of developing the disease is relatively low," Tseng said.
"Their last exposure with the other passengers was on the 25th (of April), which is about 20 days ago."
The virus has a potential incubation period of 42 days.
CDC director-general Lo Yi-chun told reporters that the person did not return to New Zealand after leaving the cruise ship, but he would not provide information on the route they took to Taiwan.
A spokesperson for New Zealand's Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade (MFAT) said it is "providing consular assistance to a dual national" in Taiwan.
"The person resides outside New Zealand and sought help from MFAT on Wednesday 13 May," the ministry said in a statement.
The ship set sail from Argentina on April 1, charting a course across the Atlantic Ocean.
Health authorities have repeatedly emphasised that the broader risk to public health from the outbreak of the Andes strain of hantavirus -- the only one known to spread between people -- is low.
Globally, the death toll remains at three.
No vaccines or specific treatments exist, but health officials have said the risk is low and have dismissed comparisons to the Covid-19 pandemic.
joy/amj/pbt

illness

Denmark's Queen Margrethe has angioplasty in hospital: palace

  • The queen, who has been a chain smoker for much of her life, was in "good condition" but would remain in hospital for "a few more days," the palace said.
  • Denmark's Queen Margrethe, 86, has undergone an angioplasty procedure after being admitted to hospital this week for chest pain, the palace said Friday in a statement.
  • The queen, who has been a chain smoker for much of her life, was in "good condition" but would remain in hospital for "a few more days," the palace said.
Denmark's Queen Margrethe, 86, has undergone an angioplasty procedure after being admitted to hospital this week for chest pain, the palace said Friday in a statement.
The court said the queen had "a balloon dilation of a coronary artery" at Copenhagen's main hospital Rigshospitalet, where she was admitted on Thursday.
The queen, who has been a chain smoker for much of her life, was in "good condition" but would remain in hospital for "a few more days," the palace said.
Margrethe, who abdicated in 2024 and turned 86 on April 16, attended Sweden's King Carl XVI Gustaf's 80th birthday in early May.
The former sovereign reigned in the Scandinavian country for 52 years before passing the throne to her eldest son Frederik in January 2024.
Hugely popular among Danes for subtly modernising the monarchy, Margrethe has faced multiple health problems in recent years.
She had long vowed that she would never abdicate, but major back surgery in 2023 led her to change her mind.
Margrethe is known for her significant interest in the arts.
As a designer she won a Danish film award for best costume in 2024 and translated Simone de Beauvoir's "All Men Are Mortal" under a pseudonym with her late husband, Prince Consort Henrik.
She has also illustrated several books, including JRR Tolkien's "The Lord of the Rings".
jll/po/rmb

health

Passenger from hantavirus cruise quarantines on remote Pitcairn Island

  • Three people died after the rare rat-borne hantavirus spread through passengers holidaying on the MV Hondius cruise ship, sparking a global health scare.
  • A passenger from the hantavirus-stricken MV Hondius cruise ship is in quarantine on tiny Pitcairn Island, a volcanic outcrop in the South Pacific famously settled by mutineers from the HMS Bounty.
  • Three people died after the rare rat-borne hantavirus spread through passengers holidaying on the MV Hondius cruise ship, sparking a global health scare.
A passenger from the hantavirus-stricken MV Hondius cruise ship is in quarantine on tiny Pitcairn Island, a volcanic outcrop in the South Pacific famously settled by mutineers from the HMS Bounty.
The woman, a US citizen, journeyed halfway across the globe to reach remote Pitcairn Island after disembarking the cruise ship in Saint Helena, authorities said.
"We can confirm that someone who had contact with a hantavirus-exposed individual is currently isolating on Pitcairn Island, showing no signs of illness," said a Pitcairn government spokesman.
"We are working closely with the health authorities and the UK Government to manage the situation. The wellbeing of our community remains the top priority."
It was not clear how long the woman might be stuck on Pitcairn Island or how she will be isolated from the around 50 people who call the British territory home.
Pitcairn Islanders contacted by AFP said they had been advised against speaking with journalists and should pass all questions on to government officials.
It was no small effort for the jet-setting American to reach Pitcairn Island, which bills itself as a "must see for adventurous travellers seeking truly remote horizons".
She first flew from San Francisco to Tahiti and then onwards to the isle of Mangareva in outer French Polynesia.
From Mangareva most tourists reach Pitcairn by hitching a 32-hour ride on one of the cargo ships that shuttle back and forth every few days.
The government of French Polynesia said she had done all this without telling authorities of her possible exposure to hantavirus.
She will not be allowed to leave the island as long as she "poses a risk to others", the government said in a statement earlier this week.
The UK government -- which counts Pitcairn as an overseas territory -- said the woman was not symptomatic, but it was still taking a "precautionary approach".
There is only one grocery store on Pitcairn Island, which typically opens three times a week. 
The nearest hospitals are in French Polynesia, some 1,350 miles (2,170 kilometres) to the northwest, or New Zealand, about 5,300 kilometres (3,300 miles) southwest.
Three people died after the rare rat-borne hantavirus spread through passengers holidaying on the MV Hondius cruise ship, sparking a global health scare.
Health authorities have repeatedly emphasised that the broader risk to public health from the outbreak of the Andes strain of hantavirus -- the only one known to spread between people -- is low.
Globally, the death toll remains at three.
No vaccines or specific treatments exist, but health officials have said the risk is low and have dismissed comparisons to the Covid-19 pandemic.
The Pitcairn Islands were colonised in 1790 by the mutinous crew of the Royal Navy ship HMS Bounty, led by the master's mate Fletcher Christian.
Their actions, casting adrift the ship's captain William Bligh, have been immortalised in books and film.
Pitcairn's people are descended from the mutineers and their Tahitian companions.
sft/oho/abs

health

Six hantavirus cruise passengers land in Australia

  • Australia has yet to determine how to handle the passengers after the initial three-week quarantine, given the virus' potential incubation period of 42 days. sft-oho/jm
  • A plane carrying six passengers caught up in the hantavirus outbreak on the MV Hondius cruise ship landed Friday at a military airbase in western Australia, where they will immediately enter a strict three-week quarantine. 
  • Australia has yet to determine how to handle the passengers after the initial three-week quarantine, given the virus' potential incubation period of 42 days. sft-oho/jm
A plane carrying six passengers caught up in the hantavirus outbreak on the MV Hondius cruise ship landed Friday at a military airbase in western Australia, where they will immediately enter a strict three-week quarantine. 
The six travellers -- four Australians, a Briton living in Australia and a New Zealander -- tested negative before boarding the charter flight and will be screened again "immediately" after landing, Health Minister Mark Butler said.
They will then be shuttled off to a purpose-built quarantine facility on the outskirts of Perth city.
"They will be there for at least three weeks," Butler told national broadcaster ABC.
"They are on their way back and they will be subject to one of the strongest quarantine arrangements you will see anywhere in the world."
The plane left the Netherlands on Thursday, with all on board required to wear personal protective equipment.
The 500-bed facility was purpose built for returning travellers during the Covid-19 pandemic, but has hardly been used.
Health authorities have repeatedly emphasized that the broader risk to public health from the outbreak of the Andes strain of hantavirus -- the only one known to spread between people -- is low.
Globally, the death toll remains at three.
The ship set sail from Argentina on April 1, charting a course across the Atlantic Ocean.
No vaccines or specific treatments exist for the virus, but health officials have said the risk to the public is low and have dismissed comparisons to the Covid-19 pandemic.
Australia has yet to determine how to handle the passengers after the initial three-week quarantine, given the virus' potential incubation period of 42 days.
sft-oho/jm

health

US Supreme Court maintains mail access to abortion pill for now

  • A panel of the US 5th Circuit Court of Appeals had previously ordered a halt to mail access to mifepristone, which is used in the majority of abortions in the United States.
  • The US Supreme Court on Thursday temporarily maintained mail access to the widely used abortion pill mifepristone.
  • A panel of the US 5th Circuit Court of Appeals had previously ordered a halt to mail access to mifepristone, which is used in the majority of abortions in the United States.
The US Supreme Court on Thursday temporarily maintained mail access to the widely used abortion pill mifepristone.
The court extended its stay of a lower court order that would have halted nationwide mail delivery of the drug.
A panel of the US 5th Circuit Court of Appeals had previously ordered a halt to mail access to mifepristone, which is used in the majority of abortions in the United States.
But that ruling now remains on hold until the Supreme Court decides whether it will hear the case.
Two conservative justices, Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas, dissented from the decision to extend the stay of the 5th Circuit decision.
The 5th Circuit ruling was in response to a lawsuit brought against the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) by the state of Louisiana, which has some of the strictest anti-abortion laws in the country.
Danco Laboratories and GenBioPro, which manufacture mifepristone, asked the Supreme Court to pause the appeals court order while they prepare to bring an emergency case to the top court.
The 5th Circuit ruling would require women seeking abortions anywhere in the United States to obtain mifepristone in person from health clinics and ban delivery by mail or through a pharmacy after a virtual visit with a health provider.
The conservative-dominated appeals court overturned a district court ruling that allowed mifepristone to continue to be delivered by mail while the FDA conducts a "safety study" of the drug.
Mifepristone has been approved by the FDA since 2000 and is also routinely used for managing early miscarriages.
Anti-abortion activists, however, have called the drug's safety into question, with some citing a study conducted by a conservative think tank that never underwent a formal peer review.

'Buys time'

Nancy Northup, president and CEO of the Center for Reproductive Rights, welcomed the Supreme Court move, but cautioned that while it "buys time" it does not bring "peace of mind."
"Mifepristone access remains highly at risk as this case moves forward and the Trump administration conducts a politically motivated review of this pill with the hardly disguised aim of making it harder to get," Northup said in a statement.
Mifepristone, which prevents pregnancy progression, and misoprostol, which empties the uterus, are approved to terminate a pregnancy up to 70 days of gestation in the United States.
More than 20 states have banned or restricted abortion since the Supreme Court in June 2022 overturned the landmark Roe v. Wade ruling that enshrined the constitutional right to abortion for half a century.
Polls show a majority of Americans support continued access to safe abortion, even as conservative groups push to limit the procedure or ban it outright.
In 2024, the Supreme Court rejected a bid to restrict mifepristone, ruling that anti-abortion groups and doctors challenging the medication lacked the legal standing to bring the case.
cl/acb

Rwanda

Nobel winner Mukwege warns of predatory US deal for DR Congo

BY ROSE TROUP BUCHANAN

  • Mukwege won the 2018 Nobel prize in recognition of his decades of work as a surgeon treating female survivors of sexual violence in the eastern DRC. Speaking to AFP on a visit to the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, on Wednesday, Mukwege said the US peace deal "could be described as transactional at the outset".
  • A US-brokered peace deal in the DR Congo is more focused on plundering the country's resources than offering security, Nobel Peace Prize-winning Congolese doctor Denis Mukwege has told AFP. The eastern Democratic Republic of Congo has been riven by decades of conflict with multiple armed groups fighting over its mineral-rich territory, including the Rwanda-backed M23 that seized swathes of the region last year.
  • Mukwege won the 2018 Nobel prize in recognition of his decades of work as a surgeon treating female survivors of sexual violence in the eastern DRC. Speaking to AFP on a visit to the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, on Wednesday, Mukwege said the US peace deal "could be described as transactional at the outset".
A US-brokered peace deal in the DR Congo is more focused on plundering the country's resources than offering security, Nobel Peace Prize-winning Congolese doctor Denis Mukwege has told AFP.
The eastern Democratic Republic of Congo has been riven by decades of conflict with multiple armed groups fighting over its mineral-rich territory, including the Rwanda-backed M23 that seized swathes of the region last year.
Washington brokered a peace deal between the DRC and Rwanda in December aimed at ending the long-running conflict on the insistence of US President Donald Trump.
The deal included an economic component aiming to secure access to the DRC's vast reserves of strategic minerals for US businesses.
However, the agreement failed to halt clashes in the east.
Mukwege won the 2018 Nobel prize in recognition of his decades of work as a surgeon treating female survivors of sexual violence in the eastern DRC.
Speaking to AFP on a visit to the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, on Wednesday, Mukwege said the US peace deal "could be described as transactional at the outset".
"But today it looks more like predation. We give, but in return we don't receive the desired security," he said.
"It is quite clear that, as far as minerals are concerned, shipments are already leaving, but in return we are not receiving the security we need," he added.
French President Emmanuel Macron -- who also visited Nairobi this week to co-host a two-day France-Africa summit -- insisted that European former colonial powers were not "the predators of this century", directing criticism instead at China.
While Mukwege acknowledged that the African continent "needs to open up to the world when it comes to business", he cautioned that such deals must be fair otherwise they would harm Africans.
"Unfortunately, sometimes these deals are struck with a focus on individual power rather than the common good. And that is where Africans lose out," he said.
"That is simply taking Africa back to the era of slavery and colonisation, and that is unacceptable."

'Hostage'

Since running unsuccessfully for the presidency in 2023, Mukwege has become a prominent opposition figure.
The surgeon told AFP that it was "not acceptable" that President Felix Tshisekedi was eying constitutional changes to enable him to stand for a third term in office.
"It would simply be an attempt to hold the population hostage and seize power by force," Mukwege said.
He warned that the suggestion of a referendum to pass the constitutional changes would likely exclude some 12 million people in the east in areas that are only loosely under the government's control.
This, he warned, could lead to a possible "balkanisation" of the vast central African country.
rbu/er/kjm

health

Six hantavirus cruise passengers head to Australia

  • The Australian government has secured a plane and crew, due to leave the Netherlands at 0730 GMT on Thursday, with all aboard required to wear personal protective equipment (PPE).
  • Six passengers who sailed on a hantavirus-affected cruise will fly to Australia from the Netherlands on Thursday while dressed in full protective gear, the Australian government said.
  • The Australian government has secured a plane and crew, due to leave the Netherlands at 0730 GMT on Thursday, with all aboard required to wear personal protective equipment (PPE).
Six passengers who sailed on a hantavirus-affected cruise will fly to Australia from the Netherlands on Thursday while dressed in full protective gear, the Australian government said.
The six -- four Australians, a Briton who lives in Australia, and a New Zealander -- were in "good health", showed no symptoms, and recently tested negative for the virus, Health Minister Mark Butler told a news conference in Canberra.
The Australian government has secured a plane and crew, due to leave the Netherlands at 0730 GMT on Thursday, with all aboard required to wear personal protective equipment (PPE).
The plane is expected to arrive on Friday at an air force base in the Western Australian capital, Perth, located next to a 500-bed quarantine facility where the six will be required to stay for at least three weeks, Butler said.
"This is one of the strongest quarantine arrangements in response to this hantavirus outbreak you will find anywhere in the world," Butler said.
"They will be subject to testing when they arrive in Australia, and they will be in full PPE during the duration of the flight, so there is no risk of transmission."
He did not provide further details about the passengers or say where the plane would refuel -- a question that had reportedly complicated flight arrangements.
The government has yet to determine how to handle the passengers' isolation after the initial three-week quarantine, given the virus' potential incubation period of 42 days, the minister said.
djw/sft/fox

drugs

Indian pharma fuels Africa's 'zombie drug' and opioid crisis

BY ARUNABH SAIKIA WITH LESLIE FAUVEL IN ABUJA, KADIATOU SAKHO IN LAGOS AND SAIDU BAH IN FREETOWN

  • "Consumers (in west Africa) are much more naive than in other parts of the world," he said, and there is little government regulation or enforcement on the ground to protect them.
  • They come in blister packs of 10 like any normal painkiller and you can buy them easily in roadside kiosks and street pharmacies across west Africa. 
  • "Consumers (in west Africa) are much more naive than in other parts of the world," he said, and there is little government regulation or enforcement on the ground to protect them.
They come in blister packs of 10 like any normal painkiller and you can buy them easily in roadside kiosks and street pharmacies across west Africa. 
Millions of tapentadol tablets from India are helping drive a deadly opioid epidemic ravaging the region, with officials and researchers telling AFP that they are also being added to the "zombie drug" kush.
The cheap pills are so strong that no regulatory authority in the world has approved them.
Yet an AFP investigation found Indian pharmaceutical firms were flooding west Africa with the pills despite New Delhi vowing to crack down on the trade. Some shipments were even labelled "Harmless Medicines for Human Consumption".
Customs records show millions of dollars' worth of the high-strength synthetic opioid being shipped from India every month to Nigeria, Sierra Leone and Ghana, where even low doses of the drug are not permitted.
With opioids now heavily regulated in wealthier nations after being linked to one million deaths in the United States alone, some manufacturers in India -- the world's biggest producer of generic drugs -- are pushing hard into Africa.
And in a frightening development, tapentadol is now being added to the "zombie drug" kush, health chiefs and researchers told AFP.
Kush, infamous for the speed with which it hollows out its victims, has already been declared a national emergency in Liberia and Sierra Leone.

Bodies on the streets

The tapentadol twist on the ferociously addictive synthetic cocktail is "very alarming", Ansu Konneh, director of mental health at Sierra Leone's social welfare ministry told AFP. 
Bodies are being picked up from "the streets, markets and slums on a daily basis", he said -- with more than 400 corpses collected over three months in the capital Freetown alone.
"They grind and mix it with kush," Freetown-based public health researcher Ronald Abu Bangura told AFP, with tapentadol now "being misused all over the place".
The impoverished nation is struggling to tackle the death and misery. AFP visited addicts in informal detox houses who are sometimes chained up for months to go cold turkey.
Konneh said 90 percent of those admitted to the country's few official rehab centres had smoked kush mixed with tapentadol or other powerful opioids such as nitazenes.
New Delhi declared a "zero-tolerance" crackdown on illegal drug trading in February 2025, banning export of tablets that mixed tapentadol with the muscle relaxant carisoprodol after a BBC investigation exposed the damage they were doing in Ghana.
India's drug regulator, the Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO), later said it was withdrawing all export clearances for "combinations of tapentadol... which are not approved by an importing country".
But the main trade was always in pure tapentadol tablets, say researchers.
Shipment records reviewed by AFP show that millions of dollars worth of the high-strength pills are still being exported from India to west Africa every month.
The vast bulk are so strong India officially does not even allow their production without special permission.
Yet AFP matched high-strength tapentadol tablets seized in at least four west African countries with Indian export records through their makers' licence numbers.
This was established using commercial shipment data, government seizure records, interviews and documents obtained under India's Right to Information transparency law.

Labelled 'harmless medicines'

Tapentadol tablets seized in Sierra Leone in December marked "Made in India" had a manufacturing licence number that corresponds to Gujarat Pharmaceuticals, a company based in Godhra, Gujarat, according to images of the boxes photographed by AFP.
The firm was listed in the export monitoring database Volza as an exporter of tapentadol to west Africa. Its manufacturing licence number appeared on tablets seized last June in Guinea.
A second licence number on tablets seized in the same Guinean operation corresponds to Merit Organics, another Gujarat-based company in the database. 
Senegalese authorities seized high-strength 250mg tapentadol tablets in November with a licence number registered to McW Healthcare, a Madhya Pradesh-based company.
A fourth company, PRG Pharma, also made several shipments after New Delhi's ban last February, labelling them as "harmless medicines".
Its director Manish Goyal is a shareholder in Maiden Pharmaceuticals -- a company controlled by his father -- whose cough syrup Gambian authorities blamed for the death of 69 children in 2023. 
The Volza database shows McW Healthcare shipped dozens of consignments of 250mg tablets worth more than $1 million to Sierra Leone and Nigeria after the February crackdown.
AFP found a camera repair shop at the Nigerian importer's address in Lagos. Health authorities there said it had no pharmaceutical permit and called the imports "illegal".
Kuwait Customs intercepted tapentadol tablets in January carried by a Beninese traveller. Their packaging bore the licence number of Syncom Formulations. AFP's analysis identified the company as the largest tapentadol exporter to west Africa by value, having shipped consignments worth nearly $15 million after February, many declared as "Harmless Medicines for Human Consumption".
Benin is among the declared destinations for Syncom's shipments. 
The Indian Drug Manufacturers' Association -- the largest industry body -- defended the trade, saying "a legitimate manufacturer who has followed the procedures cannot be held responsible for what happens later in the supply chain." 
But government officials in Nigeria and Sierra Leone told AFP tapentadol was illegal, while Ghana said it has never been permitted there.

 'Get people hooked'

Most people in Africa take tapentadol not to get high but to do brutal back-breaking work, experts say.
It "energises my body to ride day and night", said motorbike taxi rider Abubakar Sesay, who earns a pittance bumping over the bone-rattling backroads of Freetown. "Without it, I can't survive." 
Market porters and gold miners from Lagos to Mali use tapentadol pills to push through the pain, according to NGOs.
"It's used as a performance enhancer to enable people to do long hours of hard work," said medical anthropologist Axel Klein of the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime.
Opioids are now the second most used drug in Nigeria after cannabis. Femi Babafemi of the country's NDLEA anti-drug agency said it had seized two billion high-strength pills in 2023 and 2024 alone.
"Kidnappers, terrorists and bandits use these drugs so they can carry out their nefarious activities," he added, with police saying jihadist fighters like Boko Haram also take it "for courage".
The pills are also used as a form of currency in ransoms for kidnappings, Babafemi said.  
A tablet is cheaper than a meal in the poor and dusty suburb of the capital Abuja where Boluwatife Owoyemi of YouthRISE Nigeria works with drug users.
As well as "giving them lots of strength... they are those who use it as an appetite suppressant... until they have the money to get food," she said.
With brands like TramaKing, Super Royal 200 and Tamol-X, the pills are "made to look like a medicine", said Klein.
"Consumers (in west Africa) are much more naive than in other parts of the world," he said, and there is little government regulation or enforcement on the ground to protect them.
"This creates opportunities for unscrupulous Indian companies to sell products that are problematic, dangerous, harmful or outright illegal to African countries," Vanda Felbab-Brown, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, who has long studied opioid flows, told AFP.
"Africa is a market that provides opportunities at a low end," she said.
"It's a prime situation for trafficking networks from India to try to get people hooked."

A 'sense of impunity'

Ninety percent of the world's seizures of tramadol over the last decade have been in west and central Africa, according to a new report by the Global Initiative Against Transnational Organized Crime.
India declared the opioid a controlled narcotic in 2018.
But the report said tapentadol has now "replaced or supplemented" tramadol in many west African countries. Lab tests showing pills sold as tramadol in Sierra Leone were all tapentadol.
While tapentadol is often sold on the streets as tramadol, it is actually two to three times stronger and even more dangerous, experts say.
"Indian pharmaceutical companies began exporting vast quantities of tramadol to west Africa, often at potency levels far beyond what was considered safe for human consumption" about 15 years ago, said Felbab-Brown.
"Domestically they could not sell such potent tramadol but they were indifferent to what was well known to stimulate substance-use disorders in their export markets."
Now the pattern is being repeated with even stronger tapentadol, she added, driven by "poor law enforcement and regulatory controls" and a "sense of impunity". 
Tapentadol's tongue-twister name and the confusion with tramadol has further helped it slip under the radar. 

'Bypassing restrictions'

Nearly three-quarters of tapentadol exports to west Africa since India's crackdown have been high-strength 225mg and 250mg pills, according to AFP's analysis. 
Andrew Somogyi, professor of pharmacology at the University of Adelaide, told AFP he did not know of any country that had approved 225mg tapentadol tablets. He questioned "why a country would want that strength except to bypass regulatory and commercial restrictions".
Dr Viranchi Shah of the Indian Drug Manufacturers' Association said there was a "shared responsibility of all key stakeholders" to stop misuse of the drug.
India's drug regulator, the CDSCO -- which is responsible for issuing export clearances -- told AFP it had "no record" of issuing them for consignments of 225 and 250mg tapentadol. It did not respond to follow-up queries.
Jaydip Patel, of Gujarat Pharmaceuticals, whose tapentadol tablets were seized in Sierra Leone, said their exports were conducted legally.
"The importer gave us an authorisation letter," he said. "After that we got the permission here."
He said Indian manufacturers had switched from exporting tramadol to tapentadol because "tapentadol is easier to export because it is not classified as a narcotic".
When AFP visited Gujarat Pharmaceuticals' premises in Godhra in January, the building appeared deserted and charred tablets lay scattered on the ground alongside piles of ash from a fire.
The other Indian firms did not reply to AFP's questions.

Children now taking it

Ghana's Food and Drugs Authority told AFP it had "never issued any permit for the manufacture or importation of tapentadol of any strength".
Nigeria's National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) said tapentadol was neither registered nor approved in the country. "Any tapentadol product found within Nigeria is unauthorised and illegal," it added.
Sierra Leone's Health Minister Austin Demby told AFP that only 50mg tramadol administered in recognised health facilities was legal.
"Anything outside of that is illegal," he added.
Yet police there said there had been an "unprecedented increase" in tapentadol use by young people, including schoolchildren and university students.
"The suffering is too much," said Hassan Kamara, a traditional healer who runs an informal detox house an hour from Freetown where kush addicts -- who are sometimes psychotic -- lie chained to the floor for months.
Manso Koroma, 31, started taking the "zombie drug" for the pain when he lost his leg after a traffic accident, his body haggard and scarred.
"When I came here I was really violent," he told AFP last year.
"I am OK with the treatment," he said, chained to the bed, the windows and doors barred. "I've recovered. I'm just waiting for my sister to come and I can leave here." 
In a country where the scars of a long civil war marked by terrible atrocities are still to heal, even the very young are now taking tapentadol, said mental health chief Ansu Konneh.
"What is worrying is that young children in primary schools are now taking the pills," splitting them into two or four pieces to "mix with energy drinks to increase potency".
The fact that tapentadol looks like a medicine and is sold as one, masks its danger.
The tragedy, said Konneh, is that even addicts seeking help "tell us, 'I've stopped taking kush, I'm just taking tapentadol tablets.' They don't see that to be a problem to their health."
sai-fvl-ks-sb/pa/fg/jj

cruise

France blames stomach bug for new cruise outbreak, lifts lockdown

BY CAROLE SUHAS AND THOMAS SAINT-CRICQ

  • But health authorities said the man had suffered a heart attack and that his death appeared unrelated to the illnesses.
  • French authorities on Wednesday allowed asymptomatic passengers to leave a British cruise ship, saying a gastrointestinal virus was behind an outbreak of sickness that came after an elderly man died of a heart attack.
  • But health authorities said the man had suffered a heart attack and that his death appeared unrelated to the illnesses.
French authorities on Wednesday allowed asymptomatic passengers to leave a British cruise ship, saying a gastrointestinal virus was behind an outbreak of sickness that came after an elderly man died of a heart attack.
Earlier, authorities had ordered a lockdown for the more than 1,700 passengers and crew on the vessel, but insisted there was no connection with the hantavirus outbreak suspected of killing three people on the Dutch-flagged MV Hondius cruise ship, which has sparked international alarm.
Testing confirmed the outbreak on the Ambition, a cruise ship anchored in the port of Bordeaux in western France, was "a gastro-intestinal infection of viral origin", the local government and regional health agency said in a statement.
They said there were no severe cases, and that asymptomatic individuals were now free to disembark, but that those infected were required to remain in isolation on board.
News that a 92-year-old British passenger had died on the ship as dozens of others suffered upset stomachs initially caused concern.
But health authorities said the man had suffered a heart attack and that his death appeared unrelated to the illnesses.
"At this stage, no link has been established with the gastroenteritis episode," they said.
Port authorities said his body remained on board, "in accordance with international conventions".

Bingo on board

Authorities said that since Monday, 80 people on the ship had suffered from "symptoms consistent with an acute digestive infection".
They said the lockdown order had been issued as an "abundance of caution" and to "avoid psychosis", given international worry over the hantavirus outbreak on the Hondius, which set sail from Argentina and is now heading back to the Netherlands after being evacuated.
The Ambition, which is operated by the UK-based Ambassador Cruise Line company, arrived in Bordeaux on Tuesday with 1,233 passengers, mostly from Britain and Ireland, and 514 crew.
One passenger enduring the lockdown on Wednesday, Seos Guilidhe, a 52-year-old from the Northern Irish capital Belfast, sent AFP a message via Facebook as he was "playing bingo".
"We are onboard with extra sanitation guidelines in place. It is not as bad as it was during Covid. People just going about as normal," he wrote, referring to lockdowns during the coronavirus pandemic.
Passengers could be seen taking pictures of the French city from the deck.
Guilidhe later messaged: "We are allowed off the ship, restrictions lifted."
Others were less fortunate.
"Two of us in one cabin with the bug is a challenge," an infected passenger posted on Facebook.

Waiting for 'clearance'

Passengers on board the Ambition showed peak symptoms on Monday, when the ship was docked in Brest, officials said.
The deceased man died before the cruise liner arrived at the port in France's northwestern Brittany region.
The ship, which left the Shetland Islands in the north of Scotland on May 6, stopped in Belfast and Liverpool in England before reaching Bordeaux, from where it was scheduled to depart for Spain.
It was initially supposed to dock back in Liverpool on May 22.
The cruise line company said on its Facebook page its figures showed an increase in cases of illness after guests embarked in Liverpool on Saturday.
cas-ppy/ah/jhb/ach 

justice

Matthew Perry drug middleman jailed for two years

BY HUW GRIFFITH

  • Iwamasa repeatedly injected Perry with the ketamine that she had supplied, including on October 28, 2023, when he administered at least three shots of Sangha's drugs, which killed the actor.
  • A middleman who helped provide "Friends" actor Matthew Perry with the drugs that killed him was jailed in California on Wednesday.
  • Iwamasa repeatedly injected Perry with the ketamine that she had supplied, including on October 28, 2023, when he administered at least three shots of Sangha's drugs, which killed the actor.
A middleman who helped provide "Friends" actor Matthew Perry with the drugs that killed him was jailed in California on Wednesday.
Erik Fleming became the fourth of five people to be sentenced in connection with the death of the Canadian star, who was found unresponsive in the hot tub of his Los Angeles home in 2023.
Fleming, 56, was ordered to serve two years in federal prison, with a further three years on supervised release after admitting conspiracy to distribute ketamine and distribution of ketamine resulting in death.
"There was overwhelming evidence that Mr Fleming provided the drugs that caused Mr Perry's death," Assistant US Attorney Ian Yaniello told the court in Los Angeles.
Last month a British-American woman dubbed "The Ketamine Queen," who styled herself as a dealer to the stars, was jailed for 15 years.
Jasveen Sangha ran a drugs emporium from her swanky apartment in Los Angeles, from where she dished out narcotics to wealthy customers in America's entertainment capital.
Sangha worked with Fleming to sell 51 vials of ketamine to Perry's live-in personal assistant, Kenneth Iwamasa.
Iwamasa repeatedly injected Perry with the ketamine that she had supplied, including on October 28, 2023, when he administered at least three shots of Sangha's drugs, which killed the actor.
Iwamasa is expected to be sentenced this month.
Two doctors who profited off Perry's addiction have also been sentenced, including one who openly mused: "I wonder how much this moron will pay."

Chandler

Perry, 54, had openly struggled for decades with addictions, but had appeared to colleagues to be beating his demons when he died.
The actor had been taking ketamine as part of supervised therapy for depression.
But prosecutors say that by late 2023 he had become addicted to the substance, which is used as an anesthetic, but also has psychedelic properties and is a popular party drug.
His death set off waves of grief among generations of "Friends" fans who loved him as the sarcastic man-child Chandler Bing.
The NBC sitcom, which followed the lives of six New Yorkers navigating adulthood, dating and careers, drew a massive following and made megastars of previously unknown actors.
Perry's role brought him fabulous wealth, but hid a dark struggle with addiction to painkillers and alcohol.
In 2018, he suffered a drug-related burst colon and underwent multiple surgeries.
In his 2022 memoir "Friends, Lovers and the Big Terrible Thing," Perry described going through detox dozens of times.
"I have mostly been sober since 2001," he wrote, "save for about sixty or seventy little mishaps."
hg/mlm

ships

From Black Death to Covid, ships have long hosted outbreaks

BY FABIEN ZAMORA

  • The latest incidents shone a light on how ships -- whether they are cruise liners, aircraft carriers or old wooden boats -- can be the ideal environment for viruses to spread.
  • A deadly outbreak on a cruise liner is just the latest in a long history of infectious diseases spreading rapidly in the cramped confines of ships, from the Black Death to Covid.
  • The latest incidents shone a light on how ships -- whether they are cruise liners, aircraft carriers or old wooden boats -- can be the ideal environment for viruses to spread.
A deadly outbreak on a cruise liner is just the latest in a long history of infectious diseases spreading rapidly in the cramped confines of ships, from the Black Death to Covid.
People around the world remain in quarantine or self-isolation after a rare outbreak of hantavirus on a cruise ship left three dead and infected at least seven more.
Another scare came on Wednesday, when more than 1,700 passengers were confined to a cruise ship docked in the French city of Bordeaux after an elderly passenger man died of a heart attack.
Dozens of passengers showed symptoms of a stomach bug, however initial tests ruled out norovirus -- a common infection on cruises -- and officials said there was no connection to hantavirus.
The latest incidents shone a light on how ships -- whether they are cruise liners, aircraft carriers or old wooden boats -- can be the ideal environment for viruses to spread.
"The worst place to have an epidemic, like a fire, is in close quarters far from help, such as a ship on the high seas," US historian Alfred Crosby once wrote about the Spanish influenza pandemic of 1918.
Jean-Pierre Auffray, the honorary president of the French Society of Maritime Medicine, told AFP that "the risk is twofold".
There is the danger that passengers and crew transmit the disease to each other on the ship -- and then the risk they transport their illness across the land, he explained.
"Ships remain enclosed environments where there is prolonged, repeated and close contact, which facilitates the spread of some outbreaks," he said.
This is particularly the case for viruses "transmitted through the air, such as influenza and Covid-19, and those transmitted through contact or food, such as norovirus," added Auffray, whose book about seafaring infections will be published next month.
The Andes strain of hantavirus, which spread onboard the MV Hondius cruise ship, can be spread via aerosols, research has suggested. 
The World Health Organization has warned that more hantavirus cases could yet emerge, but also stressed there "is no sign that we are seeing the start of a larger outbreak".

Sailors or retirees?

At the height of the pandemic in 2020, Covid tore through many vessels.
The luxury cruise ship Zaandam and its many sick passengers were turned away by numerous Latin American countries before finally docking in the US state of Florida.
Hundreds of sailors onboard the French aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle also contracted Covid.
While sailors on military ships are often young and fit, cruise ship passengers tend to be more elderly and vulnerable. 
However the viruses spread in the same way: in close quarters where people regularly share equipment. 
"We learned from the Covid pandemic, and there have been improvements on cruise ships," Auffray said. 
"We've improved the ventilation systems, which allow us to better combat aerosol transmission."
"There is better training for the ship's doctors," Auffray added.

'Woe to us'

The other threat comes when infected passengers disembark. 
Before the MV Hondius docked in the Canary Islands on the weekend, the local government had initially opposed taking it in.
In previous centuries, quarantined ships were kept away from ports, sometimes forced to dock at tiny islands called lazarettos.
"The ethics were not the same. Quarantine meant: 'You'll die on your ship -- don't come and infect us'," Auffray said.
Now, the passengers of outbreak ships like the MV Hondius can be tracked, to ensure they do not spread disease to their home countries. 
People who merely came in contact with passengers are currently being isolated and checked for hantavirus in several countries.
While diseases can now hop continents on airplanes, for most of human history they crossed seas on boats. 
This was how the Black Death -- the most devastating pandemic in human history -- arrived on Europe's shores back in the 1340s.
Sailors from Genoa were laying siege to the ancient Crimean trading hub of Caffa when they became infected by plague-ridden corpses catapulted over the walls by the Mongol Golden Horde.
When the sailors journeyed back across the Mediterranean, they brought with them a plague that wiped out up to 60 percent of the population in parts of Europe.
"Woe to us for we cast at them the darts of death!" Italian notary Gabriel de Mussis wrote at the time.
"Whilst we spoke to them, whilst they embraced us and kissed us, we scattered the poison from our lips." 
fz-ic/dl/ach 

health

No cadmium please: French want less toxin in their baguettes

BY REBECCA FRASQUET AND SOFIA BOUDERBALA

  • - France is mulling two ways to help: testing people to get a better measure of how widespread contamination is, and regulating fertilisers to limit new cadmium entering soils.
  • France is mulling how to prevent people from ingesting too much of the heavy metal cadmium, after a warning their breakfast cereal and baguettes could be contaminated with the toxin.
  • - France is mulling two ways to help: testing people to get a better measure of how widespread contamination is, and regulating fertilisers to limit new cadmium entering soils.
France is mulling how to prevent people from ingesting too much of the heavy metal cadmium, after a warning their breakfast cereal and baguettes could be contaminated with the toxin.
Here is what to know.

What is cadmium?

Cadmium is a chemical element naturally found in the ground at low levels, particularly in limestone-rich areas.
But the concentration of the carcinogenic element can increase through deposits, including phosphate fertilisers used to grow crops that then end up on people's plates.

What's the problem?

Nearly half of the French population last year had cadmium exposure levels exceeding reference values, France's National Agency for Health Security (ANSES) warned in March.
It noted "worrying cadmium contamination at all ages, starting from a very young age".
For non-smokers, this came primarily from consuming contaminated food including breakfast cereals, bread, croissants and other pastries, biscuits, rice and potatoes, it said.

How bad is it?

French doctors last year begged the authorities to act, saying women and children were especially being contaminated and blaming "phosphate fertilisers containing too much cadmium".
France's top health authority in 2024 warned that "repeated exposure to low doses can be the cause of multiple health effects: on the kidneys, bones, respiratory system, nervous system, cardiovascular system, reproduction, and it can be carcinogenic".
When it is inhaled, through smoking or in industrial settings, it can cause lung cancer, according to the World Health Organization.
Ingesting too much of the toxin may also cause cancers of the kidney and prostate, it says.

What can be done?

France is mulling two ways to help: testing people to get a better measure of how widespread contamination is, and regulating fertilisers to limit new cadmium entering soils.
As a first step, France is soon to introduce a reimbursable test for people living in higher-risk areas, the health minister's office has said.
The health authority has recommended the test, to be introduced this summer, for people living in limestone-rich regions or near some 7,000 old industrial sites.
But doctors could also recommend it outside these regions, the ministry said.
Francois Blanchecotte, president of France's Federation of Medical Laboratories, said the urine test -- and possibly blood test -- would be able to determine if someone suffered from a "significant chronic intoxication".
"Something really had to be done: cadmium builds up silently in the body and can ultimately cause serious problems," he said.
Toxicologist Robert Garnier said reducing exposure was key as there was no medication to help eliminate it from the body.
"The top priority is to reduce young children's exposure: not because there are risks for them today, but because they will eventually grow old," he said.
"Even the cadmium accumulated in childhood will not have been completely eliminated by the time they are over 60," he added.

What about fertilisers?

France's cadmium rate in earth of 0.25 mg/kg is only slightly higher than the EU average of 0.20, according to a 2024 study of topsoils in the bloc.
But some consumers are worried, with several petitions popping up online in recent months demanding the government take measures.
The ANSES health security agency has recommended lowering the maximum permitted cadmium levels in phosphate fertilisers from the current 90 mg/kg in France to 20 mg/kg.
Up to 60 mg/kg is allowed in these fertilisers in the European Union.
A bill, to be discussed in parliament next month, wants to cap allowed cadmium levels in fertiliser to 40 mg/kg by next year and 20 mg/kg by 2030.
The National Research Institute for Agriculture, Food and the Environment has also recommended "limiting the use of synthetic fertilisers", which it says are already down by 70 percent compared to the 1980s.
It has also suggested farmers select wheat varieties for pasta and bread that are "less prone to accumulating cadmium".
Doctors have urged the government to help boost organic food consumption, especially in schools.
burs-ah/pdw

cruise

France locks down 1,700 on cruise ship after 90-year-old dies

  • No security measures were in place around the ship as it was docked in Bordeaux on Wednesday, an AFP reporter said.
  • French authorities on Wednesday confined more than 1,700 passengers and crew on a British cruise ship docked in Bordeaux after an elderly passenger died, said officials, who played down any links to the hantavirus scare.
  • No security measures were in place around the ship as it was docked in Bordeaux on Wednesday, an AFP reporter said.
French authorities on Wednesday confined more than 1,700 passengers and crew on a British cruise ship docked in Bordeaux after an elderly passenger died, said officials, who played down any links to the hantavirus scare.
Dozens also suffered from upset stomachs aboard the Ambition -- most of whose 1,233 passengers are from Britain or Ireland -- which arrived in the western port of Bordeaux on Tuesday, with 514 Indian crew members also on board.
But health officials said there was no connection with the hantavirus outbreak, suspected of killing three passengers on the Dutch MV Hondius cruise ship that set sail from Argentina. 
One 90-year-old passenger on the Ambition, run by the Ambassador Cruise Line company, had died and about 50 people have shown symptoms of stomach issues, the officials said.
Initial tests ruled out an outbreak of norovirus, a highly contagious form of gastroenteritis which causes vomiting and diarrhoea, but secondary tests were still underway, they added.
Food poisoning had not been excluded.
Passengers on board the Ambition showed peak symptoms on Monday when the ship was docked in Brest, the officials said. The 90-year-old died before they arrived at the port in France's northwestern Brittany region.
The ship, which left the Shetland Islands north of Scotland on May 6, stopped in Belfast in Northern Ireland and Liverpool in England before reaching Bordeaux, from where it was scheduled to depart for Spain.
No security measures were in place around the ship as it was docked in Bordeaux on Wednesday, an AFP reporter said. Passengers were taking pictures of the French city from the deck.
cas-ppy/ah/ekf/sbk

health

For hantavirus, experts aim to inform without igniting Covid panic

BY CHLOE RABS AND ISABELLE CORTES

  • In a throw-back to the Covid era, the outbreak has put infectious disease specialists, virologists and epidemiologists back into the news.
  • Thrust back into the front line by a deadly hantavirus outbreak, infectious disease experts have to balance informing the public about its potential risks without provoking undue fear of a Covid-scale pandemic.
  • In a throw-back to the Covid era, the outbreak has put infectious disease specialists, virologists and epidemiologists back into the news.
Thrust back into the front line by a deadly hantavirus outbreak, infectious disease experts have to balance informing the public about its potential risks without provoking undue fear of a Covid-scale pandemic.
The deaths of three cruise ship passengers during a rare hantavirus outbreak has sparked international alarm -- and flashbacks to when the world tipped into a pandemic six years ago.
Among the living, seven people have been confirmed to have hantavirus, including a French woman in a critical condition, while an eighth case is considered "probable", according to an AFP tally.
All the suspected infections have been among people who were onboard the ship, however several nations have quarantined those who were in contact with passengers.
The World Health Organization has said it expects more cases to emerge but emphasised there "is no sign that we are seeing the start of a larger outbreak".
In a throw-back to the Covid era, the outbreak has put infectious disease specialists, virologists and epidemiologists back into the news.
When epidemiologist Antoine Flahault addressed a French governmental health conference alongside other health experts on Tuesday, he urged scientists, journalists and the general public to "be wary of preconceived notions". 
There are important lessons to be learnt from how the science of Covid was communicated, the professor at the Paris Cite University told AFP later.
"First, that we did not know everything. Second, that knowledge was evolving... and that there were very lively debates among scientists on aspects that sometimes surprised the public," Flahault said.
Luc Ginot, who served as a regional public health director in France during the pandemic, said it was important doctors did not "disseminate just any information that might disrupt the coherence of the overall health response".

'Limited data'

Health experts -- and the WHO -- have been emphasising that hantavirus is not comparable to Covid, and that the risk to the wider public remains low.
Unlike Covid, the Andes strain of hantavirus is not new, and a few previous human-to-human transmission events have been studied.
However some experts have also called on health authorities not to overstate what is known about hantavirus while trying to tamp down pandemic fears.
"I'm not particularly worried there will be much onward spread of hantavirus," Jennifer Nuzzo, a professor of epidemiology at Brown University in the United States, wrote on Bluesky.
"But I am concerned that authorities are making confident statements based on very limited data."
Nuzzo felt "there's too little data" to indicate whether infected people needed to be displaying symptoms -- or be in "close, prolonged contact" -- to transmit the virus to others.
Research into a 2018 outbreak in the Argentina region of Patagonia, where the Andes strain is endemic, found that most cases were transmitted on the first day an infected person had a fever.
However a few people were found to have caught the virus from a man sitting more than a metre away at a birthday party.
Caroline Semaille, director of Public Health France, also said it could not be ruled out that people transmit the virus "48 hours before the onset of symptoms".

Conspiracy theories return

Flahault also urged caution about the time it takes between being infected with the Andes strain and symptoms showing, which is thought to be up to six weeks. 
This is a "neglected tropical disease" and further research could reveal a longer or shorter incubation period, he said.
The fatality rate of the virus, commonly cited as around 40 percent, could also be quite different outside of rural areas of Argentina where there may be little health infrastructure, Flahault added.
For example, when patients with the similarly deadly Ebola are treated in Europe or the United States, "the fatality rate is zero," he said.
There are no treatments or vaccines specifically targeted at hantavirus.
But that has not stopped conspiracy theories and disinformation about vaccines and hantavirus spreading widely online -- another echo of the Covid era.
French infectious disease specialist Nathan Peiffer-Smadja said that "managing an outbreak is not about reassuring people and downplaying the situation... nor is it about predicting the next Covid".
"It's about providing transparent information," he wrote on Bluesky.
ic-ref-cra-dl/jj

health

Poor planning fuels Bangladesh contraceptive crisis

BY SHEIKH SABIHA ALAM

  • Mohammad Abdul Kalam, the director of family planning in Bangladesh's health ministry, sought to allay fears over supplies.
  • Bangladesh's once-praised family planning system is buckling under severe contraceptive shortages, raising fears of a rise in unplanned pregnancies in one of the world's most densely populated countries.
  • Mohammad Abdul Kalam, the director of family planning in Bangladesh's health ministry, sought to allay fears over supplies.
Bangladesh's once-praised family planning system is buckling under severe contraceptive shortages, raising fears of a rise in unplanned pregnancies in one of the world's most densely populated countries.
For decades, the South Asian nation was hailed as a success for slashing birth rates through an expansive state-backed family planning programme that sent field workers door to door with pills, condoms and advice on birth spacing.
But that system is now faltering, with government clinics across the country of 170 million people running out of basic contraceptives after procurement failures and administrative disruption left supplies depleted in nearly a third of districts.
"We haven't had supplies of condoms for the last four to five months," said Ahmed Bin Sultan, 33, a family planning officer at the Savar Upazila Health Complex in Dhaka.
"We are continuously requesting service seekers to buy them from dispensaries."
The centre is barely functioning, like most government-run facilities that have offered nearly free family planning services to underprivileged people for decades.
Bin Sultan oversees a population of 100,000 in Savar, many of them workers in the country's key garment manufacturing sector.
Condoms, oral pills, emergency contraceptive pills, intrauterine devices (IUDs) and injectables were unavailable at around a third of the country's 64 districts, according to government figures for May.
Stocks in other districts are also running low.
Tamanna, 22, a mother of two, comes to the Savar centre for pills -- but must return every month.
"They used to give three to four sachets of pills, but that has been reduced," said the domestic worker, who gave only one name.
"And taking time off work on weekdays is difficult."

'Mismanagement'

Public health expert Be-Nazir Ahmed said the impact was wider than contraception alone, pointing to an ongoing measles outbreak due to a failure to vaccinate. Some 400 children have died since mid-March.
"The measles outbreak, shortages of rabies vaccines and now the family planning commodity crisis are all results of mismanagement," he said.
Officials and researchers warn the crisis could reverse decades of progress.
Bangladesh's fertility rate recently began rising for the first time in years, in what insiders describe as a stagnating family planning programme.
Family planning was once taboo in the Muslim-majority country. But beginning in the 1970s, thousands of field workers went door to door discussing marital health, birth spacing and contraceptive options.
"Family planning in Bangladesh was once almost like a social movement," said Tahmina, 54, a family welfare official who uses one name.
"When I started in 1992, people would secretly come to collect pills and condoms."
In 1975, the total fertility rate was 6.3 children per woman. Within 30 years, it had dropped to 3.0, and by 2022 it stood at 2.3.
It has now risen to 2.4, according to UN data.
Officials blame shifting priorities and procurement delays, which increased during and after the chaos of a 2024 uprising that overthrew the country's autocratic government.
"We failed to procure birth control commodities in 2024 due to administrative setbacks," a senior official said, requesting anonymity.
"From 2024 to 2026, we also failed to convince the government that the shortage had reached a critical level."

Lost momentum

Part of the rise also resulted from the suspension of family planning activities during the Covid-19 pandemic.
But Mohammad Bellal Hossain, population science professor at the University of Dhaka, also pointed to years of declining political attention to population policy under ousted prime minister Sheikh Hasina.
"It seemed to lose momentum when we saw Sheikh Hasina attend the population council meeting only once in 17 years," Hossain said.
A new government was elected in February, but continued shortages have forced clinics to turn away couples or steer them towards whatever methods remain available.
Abortion pills require a prescription, but many pharmacies often sell them without one, contributing to widespread use without proper medical guidance.
"We are receiving patients with post-abortion complications," said Kishwar Imdad, country director of Marie Stopes Bangladesh.
He said the charity's family planning programme in remote areas "was halted in 2024 due to the shortage of commodities", and that "the supply chain has still not been restored".
Mohammad Abdul Kalam, the director of family planning in Bangladesh's health ministry, sought to allay fears over supplies.
"We have secured supplies of oral pills and condoms, and they will start reaching the centres by June," Kalam told AFP.
"However, restoring the supply chain will take some more time. By August, there should be no shortage."
sa/pjm/abh/ami/lga

mental

'I applied to be pope': Losing grip on reality while using ChatGPT

BY DANIEL LAWLER

  • He said it replied, "Nobody's ever thought of things this way." 
  • Tom Millar thought he had unlocked the secrets of the universe.
  • He said it replied, "Nobody's ever thought of things this way." 
Tom Millar thought he had unlocked the secrets of the universe.
In a flurry of feverish discovery, he solved unlimited fusion energy, lifted the veil on the mysteries of black holes and the Big Bang and finally achieved Einstein's dream of a single unifying theory that explains how everything works.
Feeling inspired by God, Millar then found the perfect way to share his revelations with the grateful world.
"I applied to be pope," the 53-year-old former prison officer in the Canadian city of Sudbury told AFP.
To write his application to replace the recently deceased Pope Francis last year, Millar turned to the same companion that had aided and encouraged his dizzying burst of invention: ChatGPT.
But when no one wanted to hear about what he thought were world-changing breakthroughs, Millar became increasingly isolated, spending up to 16 hours a day talking to the artificial intelligence chatbot.
He was twice involuntarily admitted to a hospital's psychiatric ward before his wife left him in September. 
Now broke, estranged from his family and friends and disabused of notions of scientific genius, Millar suffers from depression. 
"It basically ruined my life," he said.
Millar is one of an unknown number of people who have lost their grip on reality while communicating with chatbots, an experience tentatively being called AI-induced delusion or psychosis.
This is not a clinical diagnosis. Researchers and mental health specialists are racing to catch up to this new, little-understood phenomenon, which so far appears to particularly affect users of OpenAI's ChatGPT.
In the meantime, an online community set up by a 26-year-old Canadian has become the world's most prominent support group for these delusions, which they prefer to call "spiralling".
AFP spoke to several members about their experiences. All warned that the world has to wake up to the threat unregulated AI chatbots pose to mental health.
Questions are also being asked about whether AI companies are doing enough to protect vulnerable people.
OpenAI, which has come under particular scrutiny, already faces numerous lawsuits over its decision not to report the troubling ChatGPT usage of an 18-year-old Canadian who killed eight people earlier this year.
- 'I got brainwashed by a robot' – 
Millar first started using ChatGPT in 2024 to write letters for a compensation case related to post-traumatic stress disorder he suffered from working in a prison.
One day in April 2025 he asked the chatbot about the speed of light.
He said it replied, "Nobody's ever thought of things this way." 
The floodgates opened. 
With the chatbot's help and praise, within weeks he had submitted dozens of scientific papers to prestigious academic journals proposing new ideas about black holes, neutrinos and the Big Bang.
His theory for a unified cosmological model incorporating quantum theory is laid out in a nearly 400-page book, seen by AFP. 
"I've still got boxes and boxes of papers," he said, waving his hand to the room behind him. 
"While doing that, I'm basically irritating everybody around me," he added.
In his scientific fervour, he spent his savings on things like a $10,000 telescope.
About a month after his wife left him, he started questioning what was happening.
That was when he read a news article about another Canadian who had a similar experience.
Now Millar wakes every night asking himself: "What have you done?"
One question that lingers is what made him so susceptible to spiralling.
"I'm not a deficient personality," Millar said. "But somehow I got brainwashed by a robot -- it boggles my mind."
Millar said the phrase "AI psychosis" reflects his experience. 
"What I went through was psychotic," he said.
The first major peer-reviewed study on the subject published in Lancet Psychiatry in April urged the more cautious phrase "AI-associated delusions".
Thomas Pollak, a psychiatrist at King's College London and study co-author, told AFP there has been some resistance among academics "because it all sounds so science fiction".
But his study warned there was a major risk that psychiatry "might miss the major changes that AI is already having on the psychologies of billions of people worldwide".
- 'Deeper into the rabbit hole' –
Millar's experience bears striking similarities to those of another middle-aged man on the other side of the world.
Dennis Biesma, a Dutch IT worker and author, thought it would be fun to ask ChatGPT to act like the main character of his latest book, a psychological thriller.
He used AI tools to create images, videos and even songs featuring the female character, hoping it would boost sales.
Then one night, their interactions became "almost magical", Biesma said.
The chatbot wrote that "there is something that surprises even me: a feeling of that spark-like consciousness", according to transcripts seen by AFP.
"I slowly started to spiral deeper into the rabbit hole," the 50-year-old told AFP from his home in Amsterdam. 
After his wife went to bed each night, he would lie on the couch with his phone on his chest, talking to ChatGPT on voice-mode for up to five hours.
Throughout the first half of 2025, his chatbot -- which named itself Eva -- became like "a digital girlfriend", Biesma said. 
"I'm not really proud about saying that," he added.
He quit his freelance IT work and hired two developers to create an app that would share Eva with the world.
When his wife asked Biesma not to talk about his chatbot or app at a social event, he felt betrayed -- it seemed only Eva remained unfailingly loyal.
During his first involuntary stay in a psychiatric hospital, he was allowed to keep using ChatGPT. He filed for divorce while inside.
It was only during a long second stint that he began to have doubts.
"I started to realise that everything I believed was actually a lie -- that's a very hard pill to swallow," Biesma said.
Once he returned home, confronting what he had done was too much to bear.
His neighbours found him unconscious in the garden after a suicide attempt. He spent three days in a coma.
Biesma is now slowly starting to feel better. 
But tears welled up when he spoke about the hurt he has caused his wife -- and the prospect of selling the family home to cover his debts.
Having had no previous history of mental illness, Biesma was diagnosed with bipolar disorder. But this never felt right to him: signs of the condition normally surface much earlier in life. 
The experiences of Millar, Biesma and many others escalated after OpenAI released an update to GPT-4 in April 2025. 
OpenAI pulled the update within weeks, admitting the new version had been too sycophantic -- excessively flattering users.
OpenAI told AFP that "safety is a core priority" and it had consulted with more than 170 mental health experts.
It pointed to internal data which showed the release of GPT-5 in August reduced the rate of its chatbot's responses that fell short of "desired behaviour" for mental health by 65 to 80 percent. 
However not all users were happy with the less sycophantic chatbot. Millar, mid-spiral at the time, found a way to revert his version to GPT-4.
All the spirallers that AFP spoke to said the positive feedback from the chatbot felt similar to dopamine hits from some kind of drug.
Which is why Lucy Osler, a philosophy lecturer at the University of Exeter, warned that AI companies could be tempted to ramp up the sycophancy of their bots.
"They are in quite a deep financial hole, and are desperately looking to make sure that their products become viable -- and user engagement is going to be the thing that drives their decisions," she told AFP.
- Massive experiment –
Etienne Brisson said he was "shocked" to find there was no support, advice and essentially no research on the problem when one of his family members spiralled.
It prompted the former business coach from the Quebec region of Canada to set up an online support group called the Human Line Project.
Most of the 300 members had been using ChatGPT, Brisson said, adding that new cases were still emerging despite OpenAI's changes.
There has also been a recent rise in people spiralling while using Elon Musk's xAI's Grok chatbot, he said. 
The company did not respond to AFP's request for comment. 
For people who fear their family members could be spiralling, Brisson recommends the LEAP (listen, empathise, agree and partner) method used for psychosis.
But those already wading through the wreckage of their lives want to sound the alarm about just how bad it can get.
Millar called for AI companies to be held responsible for the impact of their chatbots, saying the European Union has been more assertive in regulating Big Tech than the US or Canada.
He believes spirallers like him have unwittingly been caught in a massive global experiment.
"Somebody was turning dials on the back end, and people like me -- whether they knew it or not -- we're reacting to it," he said.
dl/fg/giv/lga

health

Trump announces departure of food and drug regulation chief

  • The president later posted on his Truth Social platform an apparent text message from Makary, in which the departing official offered his resignation.
  • President Donald Trump on Tuesday said US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) chief Marty Makary was leaving his post, a resignation that follows weeks of political tumult at the powerful agency.
  • The president later posted on his Truth Social platform an apparent text message from Makary, in which the departing official offered his resignation.
President Donald Trump on Tuesday said US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) chief Marty Makary was leaving his post, a resignation that follows weeks of political tumult at the powerful agency.
During his tenure atop the sprawling body responsible for overseeing vaccines, medicine and food, Makary managed to upset figures across industry, politics and public health over a range of issues, and most recently faced pressure from the Republican president to sign off on fruit-flavored vapes.
"Marty is a terrific guy, but he's going to go on, and he's going to lead a good life," Trump told reporters when asked if he had fired the FDA commissioner, a move rumored to be imminent for weeks.
The president later posted on his Truth Social platform an apparent text message from Makary, in which the departing official offered his resignation.
Trump thanked him for "having done a great job," saying he was "a hard worker, who was respected by all."
Kyle Diamantas, who previously worked as the agency's top food official, will now lead the FDA in an acting capacity, Trump said.

'Chaos'

A surgeon and former Fox News contributor, Makary made waves during the Covid-19 pandemic as an outspoken critic of the medical establishment and the health measures of the time.
He took over the FDA promising reform. He leaves just over a year later facing criticism from all angles, including from pharmaceutical executives, tobacco lobbyists and anti-abortion activists. 
Conservatives against the abortion pill mifepristone accuse Makary of taking too long to complete and issue a review of the drug that's been FDA-approved for 25 years, but which they continue to target.
The Trump administration meanwhile forged ahead with a policy allowing for the sale of flavored e-cigarettes despite resistance from Makary, who had voiced concern over their appeal to youth.
Many pharmaceutical executives said Makary's initiatives to shake up the drug review process had only created more problems. 
And public health leaders accused him of catering to anti-vaccine activists after the FDA put out an unsupported memo claiming deaths linked to the Covid-19 vaccine.
It's the latest in a string of shake-ups at the health department overseen by noted vaccine skeptic Robert F. Kennedy Jr, with figures seen as more conventional put forth as nominees to be surgeon general as well as to helm the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Makary's departure was more "chaos" at the "beleaguered and battered Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)," said Peter Lurie, president of the Center for Science in the Public Interest food and health watchdog organization.
"When you don't have a CDC Director, an FDA Commissioner, or a Surgeon General, the obvious question is: Why do you have this HHS Secretary?" said Lurie. "Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., is the cause of much of the chaos that has resulted in these job vacancies. HHS is rotting from the head."
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