Perfil (Sabado)

In Quilmes, military steps in to assist food deliveries, hospitals

- – TIMES/AFP

Along line waits for the food delivery, brought in by a military truck. In a poor neighbourh­ood in Quilmes, on the outskirts of Buenos Aires, mandatory isolation is enforced but the cost for citizens is high: supplies are running low and people need food.

“We come out to search for food because we have little [money]. We are in the middle of the month, and a little more – until we get paid the people need it,” says María Rosa Verdasco, as she waits her turn in a line of around a hundred people.

Verdasco, who receives a pension of about 12,000 pesos (US$180) and tops up her salary by taking care of a 97-year-old man at home, says she approves of the obligatory isolation decreed by Alberto Fernández’s government.

“Sometimes you get angry because you can’t go out, but when someone dies, that’s when you realise that it’s nonsense to worry about it,” she says.

Pregnant women, children, the elderly, young people respect the suggested one-metre distance as they wait in line by the military truck. In the barrio, the slowdown in economic activity has been felt strongly. Argentina has been gripped by recession for two years, with a subsequent increase in poverty and unemployme­nt.

At the head of the line, a young soldier is in charge of serving up to two to five food packs per person. He is one of 32 uniformed members from the Army’s emergency response team currently working with the municipali­ty of Quilmes.

The team is part of the Metropolit­an

Area Command, one of the 14 emergency zones establishe­d by the Ministry of Defence across the country to deal with the virus’ peak, which is expected to arrive in a few weeks.

In Quilmes, where some 600,000 people live, the city’s authoritie­s buy food for the vulnerable and cook it. The military is providing the trucks to transport the food and is touring neighbourh­oods once a day.

Nearby, at the infamous Campo de Mayo military barracks, located northwest of the capital, the military is also assisting.

The base – which played host to four clandestin­e detention centre during Argentina’s brutal 1976-1983 military dictatorsh­ip and was the home of the 1987 Carapintad­as mutiny – is now playing host to a temporary hospital, which has allowed for the installati­on of tens of hospital beds.

“This is a ‘triage’ hospital. We can attend to a lot of people,” Army medic Fabio Monserrat told AFP. “We are going to have a tent for 100 people so that they are comfortabl­e, and at a distance [away from each other],” he said.

The site will act as a screening zone, using infrared thermomete­rs to test patients and assess if they need to go to hospital or be referred elsewhere. Those who aren’t showing symptoms will be sent home.

 ?? RONALDO SCHEMIDT/AFP ??
RONALDO SCHEMIDT/AFP

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