GUATEMALA
CITY (Reuters) - Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei said on Friday a
large number of migrants on a deportation flight to Guatemala from the United
States this week were infected with the coronavirus, adding that U.S.
authorities had confirmed a dozen cases.
Giammattei
said 12 randomly selected people on the deportation flight tested positive for
coronavirus when examined by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
He suggested
more on the flight had tested positive as well.
“A large
part of it was infected,” the president said in a televised address, referring
to a flight carrying 73 Guatemalans that left the United States for Guatemala
City on Monday.
The Trump
administration has pressured Guatemala to keep receiving deported migrants
despite growing concern in the poor Central American nation that returnees are
bringing the virus with them and could infect remote communities.
Monday’s
flight has been at the center of a political storm since Guatemalan Health
Minister Hugo Monroy this week said up to 75% of passengers on a deportation
flight were infected with the virus. The Associated Press later cited a
Guatemalan official saying 44 people on the Monday flight were infected.
The United
States said on Thursday it had sent a CDC mission to assess the situation and
test the migrants, who remain in quarantine in a hospital.
It is not clear when the deportees became
infected. There have been 30 confirmed cases of COVID-19 among ICE employees
working in the agency’s detention facilities, including 13 at the Alexandria
Staging Facility in Louisiana, ICE data shows.
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