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Policy

Binance Donates $250K To Fight Ebola In DRC And Uganda

Binance is committing $250,000 in humanitarian funding to support Ebola response efforts in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda, adding crypto-sector backing to an outbreak that has m

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 11, 2026
3 min read
NEWS
Binance Donates $250K To Fight Ebola In DRC And Uganda
CryptoCompass editorial visual for policy coverage.

Binance is committing $250,000 in humanitarian funding to support Ebola response efforts in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda, adding crypto-sector backing to an outbreak that has moved from a local health emergency into a regional preparedness test.

The funding will be split evenly between the Uganda Red Cross Society and Médecins Sans Frontières, also known as Doctors Without Borders. The money is aimed at frontline operations in affected and high-risk communities, including emergency medical treatment, infection prevention and control, protective equipment for health workers, and community awareness campaigns.

The donation targets the Bundibugyo strain of Ebola, a rarer form of the disease that has no approved vaccine or specific treatment. That makes early detection, isolation, supportive care, safe burials, contact tracing and trusted local communication central to the response.

For Binance, the contribution expands its public-facing role in Africa beyond trading, education and financial-inclusion projects. The move also lands as digital-asset infrastructure is becoming more visible in aid and crisis contexts, including recent USDC-based humanitarian transfers tested on Algorand for Syria.

DRC Cases Rise As Ituri Remains The Hotspot

The outbreak began in eastern DRC’s Ituri province and was officially declared on May 15. The World Health Organization later determined that Ebola disease caused by Bundibugyo virus in DRC and Uganda constituted a public health emergency of international concern.

The latest Congolese figures show the outbreak widening. DRC has recorded 635 confirmed cases and 127 deaths across three eastern provinces, with Ituri accounting for more than 94% of confirmed cases. The outbreak has now reached 26 health zones nationwide, including 18 in Ituri, after Tchomia became the latest affected zone.

The same update listed 30 recoveries after eight more patients were declared recovered. Treatment activities are active at Ebola centres in Bunia and Rwampara, while response teams continue to deal with insecurity, displacement, laboratory strain and high cross-border movement.

Uganda remains under watch after spillover from DRC. The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control listed 19 confirmed cases in Uganda as of June 9, including two deaths. Most confirmed Ugandan cases had travel links to DRC, though several were linked to local transmission events.

Wider Funding Race Builds Around The Outbreak

Binance’s $250,000 donation comes as larger institutional funding also ramps up. The U.S. State Department announced an additional $20 million for Ebola preparedness in Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda and South Sudan, bringing total direct U.S. support above $220 million. The funding will support emergency operations, surveillance, testing, border screening, infection prevention, critical supplies and Ebola patient management.

WHO and Africa CDC also launched a $518 million six-month plan to contain the outbreak in DRC and Uganda while helping neighboring countries prepare for possible spread. The strategy focuses on surveillance, border screening, clinical care, laboratory capacity, infection prevention and community engagement.

Regional politics are already complicating the response. In Kenya, a court blocked a proposed U.S.-backed Ebola quarantine facility for another three weeks after protests in Nanyuki in which two people were killed. The controversy shows how fast public-health preparedness can turn political when communities fear imported risk, even before confirmed local cases appear.

The Binance funding is small beside government and multilateral commitments, but its target is direct: support the medical teams and community responders closest to the outbreak. With DRC cases still rising, Uganda monitoring spillover risk and neighboring countries preparing borders and emergency systems, the next phase depends on speed, trust, supplies and whether responders can stay ahead of transmission in high-mobility areas.

The post Binance Donates $250K To Fight Ebola In DRC And Uganda appeared first on Crypto Adventure.