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OT: Ebola-Like Virus Kills 73 In Congo Gold Mine

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Chester

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Sep 13, 1999, 3:00:00 AM9/13/99
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Sunday September 12 1:43 AM ET

Ebola-Like Virus Kills 73 In Congo Gold Mine
KINSHASA, Congo (Reuters) - An ebola-like virus festering in a
Congolese gold mine has killed 73 people, health officials said Friday.

``There are dead rats, bats and even human bodies decomposing in these
mines,'' Floribond Tshoko, an epidemiologist of the World Health
Organization (WHO), told Reuters.

The 73 have died from hemorrhagic fever -- which causes massive
internal bleeding -- believed to have been caused by the Marburg Virus.

Marburg is one of four virulent viruses that cause hemorrhagic fever.
Ebola, another of the four, is highly infectious and causes bleeding
through the mouth and skin.

The fever has killed 73 of 88 people affected in Durba in the
northwestern part of the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Officials
said it was probably caused by conditions in the mine.

Tshoko said measures should be taken to close down the mines, as three-
quarters of the 88 suspected cases registered since November 1998 were
gold diggers who entered the mines illegally without protective
equipment.

The disease has taken on epidemic proportions since May, the health
officials said.

In August, seven suspected cases of hemorrhagic fever were detected in
Durba. Three were gold diggers and one was a Ugandan soldier who had
been in the mines. Ugandan troops are backing rebels against the
government of President Laurent Kabila.

Tshoko said the Marburg Virus had been firmly identified in only eight
of the 88 known cases.

The gold mines in Durba are jointly owned by the state Office des Mines
de Kilomoto and the Canadian gold mining company Barrick Gold Corp.
(NYSE:ABX - news)

Barrick pulled out of the operations in Durba when a war between Tutsi-
led rebels and the government broke out in August 1998.

``The government has to take the measures to close the mines, but the
war situation has made that impossible,'' Tshoko said.

The area continues to be controlled by rebels and it is unclear who
would have the authority to close down the mines.

A plane belonging to Medecins Sans Frontieres flew to Durba Friday to
collect blood samples taken from the latest victims.

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- Chester
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