The Phnom Penh Post

US Embassy staff leave China after illness

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THE US State Department has evacuated more staff from China over fears they may have been hit by a mysterious illness that has struck other colleagues in the Asian country and Cuba.

The department said on Wednesday that “a number of individual­s” were sent to the United States for further evaluation following initial medical screenings.

A medical team was sent to the southern city of Guangzhou after an American employee who had experience­d strange sounds was diagnosed with brain trauma last month, reviving fears that a US rival has developed some kind of acoustic or microwave device.

US officials have said that the employee’s symptoms were consistent with the ailments that US diplomats experience­d in Cuba last year. After the first incident in Guangzhou, medical tests were offered to US government employees and family members who requested them, the State Department said.

“The medical screenings are ongoing for any personnel who have noted concerning symptoms or wanted baseline screening,” State Department spokes- woman Heather Nauert said.“US medical profession­als will continue to conduct evaluation­s to determine the cause of the reported symptoms and whether the findings are consistent with those noted in previously affected government personnel or possibly unrelated.”

Last year, 24 US diplomats and their family members in Cuba fell victim to mysterious “attacks” that left them with injuries resembling brain trauma. Ten Canadian diplomats and their relatives also suffered a strange illness.

Washington has said in the past that Cuban authoritie­s must take responsibi­lity for the safety of US diplomats on their soil, but the Havana government denies any knowledge of an attack.

The US has set up a task force to oversee the response to the mystery ailments among diplomats in China and Cuba, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said.

The State Department has warned that US diplomats should alert their mission’s medical staff “if they note new onset of symptoms that may have begun in associatio­n with experienci­ng unidentifi­ed auditory sensations”.

“Reported symptoms have included dizziness, headaches, tinnitus, fatigue, cognitive issues, visual problems, ear complaints and hearing loss, and difficulty sleeping,” the statement said.

The cases come at a sensitive time in relations between the United States and China, with the two nations mired in negotiatio­ns aimed at prevening a trade war and exchanging heated rhetoric over Beijing’s claims to the South China Sea.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry said on Thursday that its investigat­ion into the first case has not yielded any clues as to the cause of the incident.

“As for the latest incident, my understand­ing is that the US side hasn’t had any formal communicat­ion with the Chinese side about it,” Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying said.

Hua said Beijing learned about the latest cases through a report in the NewYork Times.

“I think that if there is any problem, the US can communicat­e with the Chinese side, and China will continue to adopt a responsibl­e attitude and conduct a serious investigat­ion,” she said.

 ?? FREDERIC BROWN/AFP ?? A guard is pictured outside the US Embassy in China in 2001.
FREDERIC BROWN/AFP A guard is pictured outside the US Embassy in China in 2001.

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