On 10 March, the first case was reported in the country. The case was initially reported to be a Belgian national who visited the country and was later quarantined in a hospital in Kinshasa. The Health Minister of the DRC,, said that the situation is "under control" and that "there is no need to panic". The nationality and travel history of the first case turned out to be incorrect. The case was actually a Congolese citizen who had returned from France and contacted health services. The failure to report accurate details on the first case sparked a rebuke from PresidentFélix Tshisekedi who stated in a cabinet meeting that the health ministry had acted in an "appalling and mediocre" way. The second case was confirmed to be a Cameroonian national in the country, who returned from France on 8 March. Initially asymptomatic, he later developed symptoms and received treatment in a hospital in Kinshasa. After five more confirmed cases, the first death in the country was reported, following announcements that Angola will be closing the border with the DRC. During the month there were 109 confirmed cases, eight of whom died while four recovered in March.
April 2020
There were 463 new cases in April, raising the total number of confirmed cases to 572. The death toll rose to 31. The number of recovered patients increased to 65, leaving 476 active cases at the end of the month.
May 2020
In May there were 2476 new cases, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 3048. The death toll more than doubled to 71.
June 2020
On 1 June, a new Ebola outbreak was declared in Mbandaka. In conjunction with the COVID-19 pandemic, the ongoing Kivu Ebola epidemic, and the world's largest measles outbreak, the situation has been described as a "perfect storm" by the Red Cross. On 16 June, a crowd ransacked a coronavirus treatment centre in South Kivu in response to the killing of a young man, rumoured to have been killed by police enforcing a virus curfew. On 29 June 2020, Albert M’peti Biyombo, DRC deputy health minister, wrote a letter to the Prime Minister accusing the cabinet members of colluding with networks within the health ministry to embezzle funds from the government and its aid partners. During June there were 3990 new cases, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 7038. The death toll rose to 169.
July 2020
Prevention measures
Schools, bars, restaurants, and places of worship were closed. On 19 March, President Félix Tshisekedi announced flight suspensions. On 24 March, he imposed a state of emergency and closed the borders.