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The government has suspended music concerts, cultural festivals, public celebrations and other mass gatherings in Kampala and several high-risk districts as Uganda intensifies measures to prevent the spread of Ebola Virus Disease.
The new restrictions were announced by the permanent secretary in the Ministry of Health, Dr Diana Atwine, following resolutions of the National Task Force meeting chaired by Vice President Jessica Alupo amid growing concern over the worsening Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
Under the new directives, music concerts, entertainment shows, political rallies, cultural celebrations, marathons, walkathons, road races and border-related social activities have all been halted with immediate effect in the Kampala Metropolitan Area and districts considered at high risk of Ebola transmission.
“These measures are intended to minimise opportunities for person-to-person contact that may increase the risk of transmission of Ebola infection in the event of exposure to an infected individual,” Atwine said in the circular.
The suspension affects Kampala, Wakiso, Mukono, Mpigi and several border districts, including Arua, Koboko, Kasese, Bundibugyo, Kisoro, Kanungu, Hoima, Kikuube and Kiryandongo, among others.
The Ministry of Health explained that such gatherings increase the risk of Ebola transmission because they involve uncontrolled crowd mixing, prolonged physical interaction, excessive sweating and unnecessary movement of people.
Atwine said non-essential gatherings where effective infection prevention and control measures cannot be guaranteed will not be permitted until further notice.
Organisers have also been directed to avoid overcrowding, discourage handshakes and hugging, routinely disinfect venues and ensure participants do not share personal items such as phones, utensils and drinking containers.
“Strictly avoid physical greetings, including handshakes, hugging, and all other forms of unnecessary direct physical contact, which increase the risk of community transmission,” Atwine directed.
The ministry further ordered all organisers of approved gatherings to designate focal persons responsible for enforcing infection prevention measures throughout events.
Participants attending permitted gatherings have additionally been urged to remain vigilant and immediately report symptoms such as fever, vomiting, diarrhoea, severe headache, weakness or unexplained bleeding to nearby health authorities.
The latest restrictions come as Uganda continues responding to imported Ebola cases linked to the ongoing outbreak in eastern DRC.