Ebola viral haemorrhagic fever is a serious haemorrhagic disorder associated with Ebola viral sepsis. The demise of the patient occurs due to severe inflammation, multi-organ dysfunction syndrome and haemorrhage associated with a poorly defined coagulopathy. Ebola virus causes endothelial injury that orchestrates inflammation and multi-organ dysfunction, especially in the liver. To address clinical and hematological features, a novel pathogenesis based on the "two-activation theory of the endothelium" is proposed. Endothelial injury activates endothelial cells that promote various clinical syndromes such as consumptive thrombocytopenia, multi-organ dysfunction and thrombotic microangiopathy.Endotheliopathy initiates two independent molecular events at endothelial cells: 1) Release of inflammatory cytokines, and 2) Activation of the platelet and exocytosis of unusually large von Willebrand factor multimers. The former triggers activation of inflammatory pathway and the latter mediates activation of microthrombotic pathway. In Ebola viral sepsis, activation of inflammatory pathway causes inflammation, but activation of microthrombotic pathway manifests as disseminated intravascular microthrombosis (DIT). The pathogenesis of Ebola viral haemorrhagic fever is hepatic coagulopathy triggered by acute hepatic necrosis as a result of endotheliopathy-associated DIT, which could manifest as TTP-like syndrome.