NAIROBI, Kenya — As the COVID-19 pandemic continues to spread in Congo, the country's Catholic bishops are insisting on measures to also fight Ebola, the deadly epidemic that has made a surprise return.

In the week beginning April 10, three new cases of the deadly disease were detected in eastern Congo.

Congolese health authorities reported that a 26-year-old man in Beni died of Ebola April 10. A young girl died on Easter, April 12, and a third person was undergoing treatment.

The new cases came just days before the World Health Organization was set to declare the epidemic ended in the central African country. Until then, 54 days had passed without a new case, and it was also 40 days after the last person with Ebola had been discharged from treatment.

"The reappearance was a surprise to all of us. We thought it (Ebola) had ended," Archbishop Marcel Utembi Tapa of Kisangani told Catholic News Service in a telephone interview. "All of us in the world have a problem — we are struggling with COVID-19. It is the main problem in the world now, but in our country, we are now struggling with both Ebola and COVID-19."

Utembi said with the reemergence of the hemorrhagic fever, the anti-Ebola measures had to continue. He said government medical teams had moved to the areas where the cases had been reported.

"We have not been able to meet as bishops due to COVID-19, but it's my opinion the Ebola measures, including washing hands and avoiding game meat, should continue," said the archbishop.

Since its emergence in eastern Congo in 2018, the Ebola epidemic has killed more than 2,250 people; more than 3,450 people have contracted the disease. The country's outbreak is the second-worst after the 2014-2016 West African outbreak.

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the director-general of the World Health Organization, said the agency "kept response teams in Beni and other high-risk areas for precisely this reason."