GOMA (Reuters): Scars from the mpox pustules are still visible on 7-year old Grace Kabuo’s face, as well as on a handful of her playmates at a camp for displaced people near Goma, in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Grace has otherwise recovered from the virus. Her mother Denise Kahindo says she is still unsure how her daughter was infected earlier this month.

“I just helplessly noticed the symptoms on her body,” she said. For disease experts, Grace’s case embodies a new concern about mpox, which was first identified over 50 years ago. Her infection was caused by a new variant that appears to be more capable of transmitting between people than previous strains.

Local doctors say they have seen 130 suspected mpox cases, almost entirely in children and adolescents, in the last four weeks at a nearby facility that treats displaced people from the camps in the last four weeks. “Fifty percent [of the 130 cases] are even less than five years old,” said Dr Pierre-Olivier Ngadjole, a medical advisor for Medair, a charity helping with treating and transporting patients from the camp near Goma to the nearby medical center in Munigi. An estimated 750,000 people have fled to the area due to fighting between the M23 rebel group and the Congolese government.

“You know the children, they play together...

and in the displaced person camps, people are side-by-side,” he added. Mpox, a viral infection that can spread through close contact is usually mild but can lead to death i.