U.S. doctor with Ebola feared he

Missionary leader shares update on American doctor who contracted Ebola in Congo 03:24

CBS News

An American doctor who wasinfected with Ebolawhile working with a medical missionary organization in Africasaid in a statementthat he is feeling "cautiously optimistic" as he fights the deadly virus.

Dr. Peter Stafford was working with the missionary group Serge in the Democratic Republic of Congo when he was infected with the virus, the group said. He was evacuated to a hospital in Berlin, Germany, to receive care, the group said Tuesday.

"Before I was evacuated I was feeling really concerned I wasn't going to make it. And now I'm cautiously optimistic," Stafford said in a statement shared by Serge.

Stafford's wife, Dr. Rebekah Stafford, who also works with Serge, and their four children were also evacuated to Germany, Serge said. They are asymptomatic and are being isolated and monitored, the group said Thursday.

TheBundibugyo ebolavirusoutbreak in Congo, which has spread to neighboring Uganda, is likely larger than what has officially been reported, health officials have warned. There are so far nearly 600 suspected cases, including 139 suspected deaths, the World Health Organization said.

Stafford was exposed to the virus while doing a surgery at Nyankunde Hospital in Bunia, a city in eastern Congo, Serge said in an earlier statement. He has worked at the hospital since 2023, according to the group. Ebolaviruses are transmitted from person to person through bodily fluids such as vomit, blood or semen, andmedical personnelcan be at high risk if exposed to sick patients.

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Dr. Peter Stafford is isolated during his evacuation from Africa. / Credit: Serge

This is only the third known outbreak of the Bundibugyo strain. There is no known vaccine or treatment for it, health officials have said. The first symptoms are typically fever, fatigue, muscle pain, headache and a sore throat. Symptoms then can progress to vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain, rash, organ dysfunction and less frequently, internal or external bleeding. The fatality rate of the Bundibugyo strain is about 30 to 50%, according tothe WHO.

Dr. Scott Myhre, the Serge director for East and Central Africa, described Stafford as "critically ill but not acutely deteriorating." Myhre said Stafford reported feeling better Thursday than the day before, and said that the infected doctor had been able to eat small amounts of food as he experiences Ebola symptoms including vomiting, rash and diarrhea.

While there is no treatment for this type of ebolavirus, patients can receive supportive care including rehydration and specific symptom treatment. Stafford's medical labs are "trending slightly in the right direction," and he has received intravenous treatments "designed to improve Ebola outcomes," Myhre said.

Hospital staff briefly allowed Stafford to see his wife and children through a hospital window, Serge said.

Matt Allison, Serge's executive director,told CBS News on Tuesdaythat Stafford is "doing well, all things considered."

"He's sick. He's sad to be away from his family, but he's getting the best care available to him," Allison said.

Dr. Rebekah Stafford and her four children evacuate Africa.  / Credit: Serge

A third Serge doctor, Dr. Patrick LaRochelle, was also potentially exposed while working in a DRC hospital. He is in quarantine at Bulovka Hospital in Prague, according to Serge. He remains asymptomatic so far, the organization said.

TheState Department announced Thursdaythat any U.S. citizens or lawful permanent residents returning from the Congo, Uganda and South Sudan who had been in those countries within three weeks of entering the U.S. had to fly into Washington-Dulles International Airport in Virginia. The same restrictionsapply to any non-citizens, according to the Department of Homeland Security.

U.S. doctor with Ebola feared he "wasn't going to make it" before evacuation

Missionary leader shares update on American doctor who contracted Ebola in Congo 03:24 An American doctor who wasinfected with Ebo...
It’s all over now: Jagger’s A-list party broken up by police

It was a star-studded celebration to wrap up weeks of filming on one of the most dramatic and remote islands in the Mediterranean.

The Telegraph Sir Mick Jagger

But a post-production party thrown on the volcanic island of Stromboli forSir Mick Jagger, Dakota Johnson, Josh O’Connor and a host of other British and American celebrities has fallen foul of local bylaws and zealous officials. It was unceremoniously broken up by Italian police on Wednesday night.

The officers were sent in on the orders of the mayor of Lipari, a neighbouring island, which is the administrative centre of theAeolian archipelago, a scatter of impressive outcrops which lie between Calabria and Sicily.

He said the party contravened noise control regulations.

The intervention of the police was met, according to local media, with “perplexity mixed with hilarity” by 82-year-old Sir Mick and his co-stars, who included the Irish actress and singer Jessie Buckley, Saoirse Ronan, and Hollywood actressIsabella Rossellini.

Rossellini has a close personal connection to the island – her father Roberto directed the 1950 cult film Stromboli, which was shot on the island, and had an affair with its leading lady, the Swedish actress Ingrid Bergman, whom he later married.

Sir Mick and the cast and crew have spent the past few weeks filming an adaptation of an illustrated book called Three Incestuous Sisters by the American writerAudrey Niffenegger.

The book is about three sisters who live together in a house by the sea and vie for the romantic attentions of the lighthouse keeper’s son.

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Sir Mick plays the lighthouse keeper in the gothic drama, which is directed by Italian director Alice Rohrwacher. His son is played by O’Connor, who received plaudits for his portrayal of Prince Charles in the Netflix drama The Crown.

While on Stromboli, Sir Mick reportedly stayed in a villa where Roberto Rossellini began his affair with Bergman.

Row between the two islands

The break-up of the film party this week prompted a row between thetwo islands.

Rosa Oliva, the head of the tourist office on Stromboli, said it was a mean-spirited decision by Riccardo Gullo, the mayor of Lipari.

Rather than being “valued and supported” after a tough winter of bad weather and suspended ferry services, Stromboli had been “penalised”.

The celebrities should have been welcomed with open arms, rather than subjected to a “punitive intervention”, she said.

“From the mayor of Lipari, one would have expected a welcome to the guests, or at least a greeting and a thank you for their crucial contribution to the Aeolian economy and their visibility. Our islands live off tourism,” she said.

It is not known whether the reaction of the Rolling Stones’ frontman was annoyance or amusement.

Either way, he left the island on Thursday by private helicopter.

It’s all over now: Jagger’s A-list party broken up by police

It was a star-studded celebration to wrap up weeks of filming on one of the most dramatic and remote islands in the Mediterranean. ...
Trump slams 'total jerk' Stephen Colbert with parting 'Late Show' shot

President Donald Trumphas weighed in onStephen Colbert's final"The Late Show" with a late-night social media takedown.

USA TODAY

One hour after the May 21 TV conclusion of the CBS late-night series — at 1:52 a.m. — Trump poured wateron the jubilant showfinale from hisTruth Socialaccount.

"Colbert is finally finished at CBS. Amazing that he lasted so long! No talent, no ratings, no life," Trump wrote in the post about the show, which ended with Colbert jamming along withPaul McCartney and former band leader Jon Batiste onstage. "He was like a dead person. You could take any person off of the street and they would be better than this total jerk. Thank goodness he’s finally gone!"

Stephen Colbert 'The Late Show'Series finale recap – Everything that happened

President Donald Trump has celebrated the end of

McCartney was the final guest on the show at the famed Ed Sullivan Theater. From the studio audience, all-star guests such as Ryan Reynolds, Paul Rudd and Bryan Cranston vied for the right to take "last guest" status.

Trump had promised 'a message at a later date'

Trump’s farewell jab at Colbert was a sure thing.

On May 20, Trump was asked by a reporter from the tarmac of Maryland's Joint Base Andrews what message he had for Colbert ahead of the May 21 finale.

"I’ll have a message at a later date," Trump said.

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Colbert was expecting the final shot, tellingPeopleon May 19 that the idea of the U.S. President criticizing late-night comics was still surprising.

"We’re clowns," Colbert said of late-night hosts. "How much does it diminish the office of the Presidency to even notice what we say?"

Trump celebrated Colbert's show ending on social media: 'I absolutely love that'

The battle between the late-night host and the President has heated up over the past year. Paramount Global, CBS's parent company,agreed to a controversial $16 million settlementwithTrumpin July over a defamation lawsuit tied to a "60 Minutes" interview with Democratic presidential candidateKamala Harris.

Colbert slammed the deal on-air on July 14,calling the $16 million payment a "big fat bribe"in a scathing opening monologue.

Three days later, on July 17,Colbert announced that CBS would end "The Late Show"after the 2025–26 season. Trump celebrated the news the next day.

"I absolutely love that Colbert got fired. His talent was even less than his ratings,"Trump said in a July 18 Truth Social post, before ripping into fellow late-night host,ABC's Jimmy Kimmel. "I hear Jimmy Kimmel is next. Has even less talent than Colbert."

Trump called Colbert a 'pathetic trainwreck' on Christmas Eve

POTUS took another social media shot in the early hours of Dec. 24 after CBS followed the Trump-hosted "The Kennedy Center Honors" broadcast with a Dec. 8 rerun episode of "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert."

"Stephen Colbert is a pathetic trainwreck, with no talent or anything else necessary for show business success," Trump wrote on hisTruth Social account at 12:16 a.m."Now, after being terminated by CBS, but left out to dry, he has actually gotten worse, along with his nonexistent ratings. Stephen is running on hatred and fumes ~ A dead man walking! CBS should, ‘put him to sleep,’ NOW, it is the humanitarian thing to do!"

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Donald Trump reacts to Stephen Colbert's last 'Late Show' episode

Trump slams 'total jerk' Stephen Colbert with parting 'Late Show' shot

President Donald Trumphas weighed in onStephen Colbert's final"The Late Show" with a late-night social media takedown. ...
Irish PM urges full investigation into death of Congolese man restrained outside store

By Conor Humphries and Padraic Halpin

Reuters People stand near flowers laid outside a department store on Henry Street where a Congolese-born man, Yves Sakila, was restrained by security guards last week and later pronounced dead in hospital, in Dublin, Ireland, May 20, 2026. REUTERS/Conor Humphries Flowers are laid outside a department store on Henry Street where a Congolese-born man, Yves Sakila, was restrained by security guards last week and later pronounced dead in hospital, in Dublin, Ireland, May 20, 2026. REUTERS/Conor Humphries People stand near flowers laid outside a department store on Henry Street where a Congolese-born man, Yves Sakila, was restrained by security guards last week and later pronounced dead in hospital, in Dublin, Ireland, May 20, 2026. REUTERS/Conor Humphries

Flowers are laid outside a department store at Henry Street, in Dublin

DUBLIN, May 20 (Reuters) - Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin has called for a thorough investigation into the death of a ‌Congolese-born man after he was restrained outside a Dublin department store, an incident ‌that has shocked the country's small Congolese community.

Irish police said the man was detained by security guards on ​Dublin's busy Henry Street last Friday in connection with an alleged shoplifting incident. He subsequently became unresponsive at the scene and was later pronounced dead, police said.

A video of the incident shared since on social media showed the man, Yves Sakila, being held on the ‌ground by a number of ⁠people for almost five minutes. At one point one of them appeared to kneel on his head or neck.

"The full circumstances of what ⁠happened need to be examined and investigated fully and thoroughly. The situation is deeply concerning," Martin told parliament on Tuesday.

Police said on Wednesday that investigations into all of the circumstances of ​the incident ​were ongoing. A man in his 80s was ​also injured at the scene as ‌Sakila attempted to flee, they said.

FLOWERS LAID AT THE SCENE

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The Irish Network Against Racism expressed concern that excessive force may have been used against Sakila and said in a statement that "the death of a black man in such circumstances is extremely worrying."

Passers-by stopped on Henry Street on Wednesday where flowers were laid at the spot Sakila was detained.

"I ‌couldn't sleep at night. I just kept watching it (the ​video) time over time," said Sanaa Basit, a ​translator and mother of two who ​moved to Ireland from Sudan 10 years ago.

Laure Zoya, vice president of ‌the Congolese Community in Ireland group, ​said its members, who ​she said were among the first black communities to move to Ireland, were shocked, disturbed and no longer felt safe.

Sakila, whom police said was in his 30s, ​moved to Ireland when he ‌was very young, she added.

"The Ireland that they knew 30 years ago ​is no longer the same," Zoya told national broadcaster RTE.

(Reporting by Padraic Halpin ​and Conor Humphries; editing by Gus Trompiz)

Irish PM urges full investigation into death of Congolese man restrained outside store

By Conor Humphries and Padraic Halpin Flowers are laid outside a department store at Henry Street, in Dublin DUBLIN, May 20 (R...
Ebola case confirmed in rebel-held Congo area far from outbreak's epicentre

By Ange Kasongo

Reuters

KINSHASA, May 21 (Reuters) - A case of Ebola has been confirmed in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo's South Kivu province - hundreds of kilometres from ‌the outbreak's epicentre - the rebel alliance that controls the area said on ‌Thursday.

The case in a rural area near the provincial capital of Bukavu marks an expansion of an outbreak ​that experts believe circulated for around two months in Ituri province, several hundred kilometres to the north, before being detected last week.

The Alliance Fleuve Congo, which includes the Rwanda-backed M23 rebels who seized swathes of eastern DRC last year, said in a statement that the 28-year-old ‌patient had died and been ⁠buried safely.

It said the person had come from the northern city of Kisangani, in Tshopo province, but it did not provide details ⁠about their recent movements.

The World Health Organization at the weekend declared the outbreak of the virus' Bundibugyo strain, for which there is no vaccine, a public health emergency of international concern.

The ​outbreak has ​been linked to 139 deaths and there were ​600 suspected cases in eastern DRC's ‌Ituri and North Kivu provinces as of Wednesday, according to the WHO. Two cases have also been confirmed in neighboring Uganda.

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M23 REBELS PLEDGE TO WORK WITH INTERNATIONAL PARTNERS

South Kivu health spokesperson Claude Bahizire told Reuters earlier on Thursday that two suspected cases, including the patient who died, had been detected in the province. The other patient was in ‌isolation awaiting test results, he said.

Last week, an ​Ebola case was confirmed in M23-held Goma, the capital ​of neighbouring North Kivu province.

M23 said ​earlier this week that it was committed to working with international partners ‌to contain the outbreak.

The response has been ​complicated by the virus' ​presence in densely populated urban areas and widespread armed violence in eastern DRC.

A 2018-2020 outbreak in the region of the Zaire strain of Ebola was the ​second-deadliest on record, killing nearly ‌2,300 people.

This time, first responders say they lack basic supplies, which some ​have attributed to foreign aid cuts by major international donors.

(Additional reporting and writing ​by Aaron Ross; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

Ebola case confirmed in rebel-held Congo area far from outbreak's epicentre

By Ange Kasongo KINSHASA, May 21 (Reuters) - A case of Ebola has been confirmed in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo's Sou...

 

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