Guatemala: Many migrants on US deportation flight had coronavirus

Guatemalan president suspends all flights of deportees from US after plane carrying 73 people was largely infected.

Guatemala deportations
Government officials stand next to a plane carrying migrants deported from the US at La Aurora International airport, in Guatemala City [File: Luis Echeverria/Reuters]

Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei has suspended all flights of deportees from the United States after a large number of migrants who were flown back this week were found to be infected with the novel coronavirus.

Giammattei said on Friday that 12 randomly selected people from the Monday deportation flight had tested positive for coronavirus when examined by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention after their arrival. He suggested more on the flight had tested positive as well.

The flight has been at the centre of a political storm since Guatemalan Health Minister Hugo Monroy this week said up to 75 percent of passengers on a deportation flight in March had been infected with the virus.

“A large part of it was infected,” the president said in a televised address, referring to Monday’s flight carrying 73 Guatemalans from Alexandria in the US state of Louisiana to Guatemala City. 

The US said on Thursday it had sent a CDC mission to assess the situation and test the migrants, who remain in quarantine in a hospital.

The Trump administration has pressured Guatemala to keep receiving migrants it deports, despite growing concern in the poor Central American nation that returnees are bringing the virus with them and could infect remote communities.

The Associated Press news agency later cited a Guatemalan official saying 44 people on Monday’s flight were infected, the discovery prompting Guatemala to suspend all deportation flights from the US.

Giammattei said: “Until the agreement between the two countries is fulfilled, giving us the certainty that those people will come with a certificate demonstrating they are free of the coronavirus, the flights of deportees are suspended.”

The president said on April 4, following another flight that arrived on March 26, the US government was asked to sign an agreement to set up a protocol for bringing deported citizens and ensuring they were free of the coronavirus.

It is not clear when the deportees became infected. There have been 30 confirmed cases of COVID-19 among US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) employees working in the agency’s detention facilities, including 13 at the Alexandria Staging Facility in Louisiana, ICE data shows.

Flights deporting Guatemalans from the US were temporarily suspended on Thursday after reports of the mass infection. Deportation flights had only started again on Monday after a five-day suspension because of earlier infections.

Neither ICE, which operates the deportation flights, nor the US embassy in Guatemala immediately responded to requests for comment.

Guatemala has reported 214 cases of the virus and seven deaths, according to a running tally kept by Johns Hopkins University.

Rural and Indigenous communities across Guatemala are increasingly concerned about the spread of coronavirus, questioning whether the country’s already fragile healthcare system could adequately respond.

Source: Al Jazeera, News Agencies