- Livingstone runs riot as England make 312-5 against Australia
- Hurricane triggers 'catastrophic' US floods, 17 dead
- 'Here to weep': French pay tribute to murdered student
- Pope in Belgium says Church must 'seek forgiveness' for sexual abuse
- Van Gogh's 'Sunflowers' targeted again with soup in UK after activists jailed
- Wimbledon given green light for controversial expansion plan
- IPL's Modi blasts cricket's Hundred as 'big fat Ponzi scheme'
- Israel says strikes Hezbollah HQ in Beirut
- Trump and Zelensky make nice after tensions over Ukraine war
- Van Gogh 'Sunflowers' in new soup protest after activists jailed
- Significant deaths in cycle racing
- Argentina judge orders dictionary to delete pejorative definition of 'Jewish'
- Netanyahu vows no let-up in war with Hezbollah, Hamas
- 'True national treasure' Maggie Smith dies aged 89
- Sudan paramilitary attack kills 18 at El-Fasher market: medic
- Maggie Smith, British theatre and cinema legend
- Arsenal boss Arteta still 'loves' Guardiola despite fiery clash
- Swiss teenage cyclist Muriel Furrer dies after crash at worlds
- Spurs skipper Son in race to recover from injury for Man Utd clash
- Veteran British actor Maggie Smith dies aged 89: family
- 'Honest' Maresca keeping Chelsea stars happy
- New York mayor in court to face corruption charges
- US Fed's preferred inflation measure edges down in August
- Global stocks rise on rate hopes, Beijing stimulus
- Climate activists jailed for throwing soup at Van Gogh's 'Sunflowers'
- S.African woman turns 118, among the oldest in the world
- Man City's Rodri to miss rest of season with ACL injury
- Hurricane leaves millions without power, four dead in southeast US
- Ireland fines Meta 91 mn euros over EU data breach
- Taken from mother by nuns, victim finds solace in pope Belgium visit
- Stranded cruise ship passengers bid bitter-sweet farewell to Belfast
- 18 dead in Sudan's El-Fasher after paramilitary attack on market: medic
- UK clears $4 bn AI partnership between Amazon, Anthropic
- Barca fans barred from Champions League away game over racist banner
- 60 'survivors' accuse ex-Harrods boss Al-Fayed of sex abuse: lawyers
- Maneskin's Damiano David releases first solo song
- Chinese stocks extend surge, Europe higher on Beijing stimulus
- US returns to Iran latest batch of ancient clay tablets
- Trump to meet Zelensky after tensions over Ukraine war
- US officials warn weakening storm Helene still 'dangerous'
- Afghan embassy in UK shutters after Taliban cuts ties
- 'No ego' before Alonso clash, says Bayern boss Kompany
- French rape trial sparks timid debate about masculinity
- Pope says Church must 'seek forgiveness' for child sexual abuse
- UK watchdog bans Naomi Campbell from running charity over 'misconduct'
- Israel, Hezbollah exchange fire after truce bid fails
- Alcaraz, Medvedev win Beijing openers as Zhang scores big upset
- Bastianini sets record time in Indonesia MotoGP practice
- At least 3,661 killed this year in Haiti violence: UN
- French minister says in favour of adding 'consent' to rape law
Mpox vaccine rollout faces challenges in east DR Congo
Mpox epicentre DR Congo is less than a week away from the start of a vaccination campaign, but the rollout faces challenges in a vast country with limited roads, often in poor condition.
Residents of Kamituga, a bustling mining town in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo's South Kivu province, will be among the first to be vaccinated when the campaign begins on October 2.
But authorities still face logistical challenges -- only one road leads to Kamituga and most of the communities surrounding it are isolated.
Taxis crammed with passengers sit beside large trucks, moving slowly through the winding, bumpy mountain pass.
For the most part, the road is a dirt track, interspersed with bridges made from metal beams and wooden planks that allow drivers to cross overflowing rivers.
The town, where the latest mpox epidemic began in September 2023, lies around 180 kilometres (112 miles) from the provincial capital, Bukavu.
- 'We are afraid' -
Lack of passable roads to villages and suburbs of Kamituga means that motorcyclists often provide rides to people going to the town's hospital.
"We are the first in danger because we carry customers and we do not know if they are infected," motorbike driver Salumu Hassan told AFP.
The only protection Hassan and his colleagues have are long-sleeved jackets and making sure they limit physical contact with passengers.
"We are afraid," Daniel Ngama, another driver, told AFP.
Kamituga has around 280,000 inhabitants, according to official statistics.
But locals estimate the number to be closer to half a million.
Gold mining attracts many to the town and it can often be difficult to monitor the population flow.
"This transient population poses a lot of problems," said Evariste Mbayu, who supervises workers responsible for detecting mpox cases in villages and neighbourhoods.
People come from the eastern city of Bukavu, neighbouring North Kivu province and even Burundi, he said.
With people coming and going "we fear that vaccination will be difficult", doctor James Wakilonga Zanguilwa at Kamituga hospital told AFP.
-'We have been cautious'-
At night, Kamituga's clubs are full of miners and sex workers.
"We don't have time to educate them" on the risk of mpox infection, doctor Dally Muamba Kambaji told AFP.
Sex workers were among the first to spread the virus in the town, according to local doctors.
"We don't have the means to protect ourselves. If you sleep with someone who is going to kiss you and take off their clothes, it's difficult to respect distancing measures," prostitute Nicole Mubukwa told AFP.
"Since we were hit by the epidemic, we have been cautious," the 30-year-old, who hopes to be vaccinated quickly, said.
"We require our customers to take off their clothes, and if they show signs of mpox, we tell them to leave," she added.
The peak of the epidemic has now passed the town and spread to the shores of Lake Kivu to the north and Lake Tanganyika to the east.
But authorities are confident they are managing the outbreak.
"We are in a very encouraging phase where the disease has stabilised," South Kivu governor Jean-Jacques Purusi told AFP.
Claude Bahizire, a doctor and communications officer at South Kivu's provincial health division, told AFP that authorities have a "cold room for the storage and transport of vaccines".
The doses must be kept at a temperature of minus 20 degrees Celsius (minus 4 degrees Fahrenheit).
Public confidence in vaccines has plummeted in South Kivu since the Covid-19 pandemic, according to a study published in the journal Human Vaccines and Immunotherapeutics last year.
But people interviewed by AFP in Kamituga all said they were ready to get vaccinated.
M.Fischer--AMWN