A doctor who recently returned to France from ​a humanitarian mission in the Democratic Republic of ‌Congo has tested positive for Ebola, marking the country’s first confirmed case linked to the current outbreak, the health ministry ​said on Wednesday.

The patient has been placed in ​isolation and health authorities are tracing contacts, the ⁠ministry said in a statement, adding that the ​risk to the wider European population was low.

Congo’s Ebola ​outbreak is linked to the rare Bundibugyo strain of the virus. It has infected more than 1,000 people and killed 267 — ​generating the largest number of confirmed cases within the ​first month of any episode of the disease, the World Health ‌Organisation ⁠said this week.

Experts say the disease was probably circulating for months before it was officially declared on May 15. Early confirmed cases were identified in urban areas, ​and infections ​have since ⁠been reported in at least three densely populated displacement camps.

The two largest previous Ebola ​outbreaks occurred in West Africa — in Guinea, ​Sierra ⁠Leone and Liberia between 2014 and 2016 — and in Congo in 2018.

A U.S. citizen treated for Ebola in ⁠Germany was discharged ​earlier this month after no ​virus had been detected in the patient since May 30.

Via Reuters