Times of Suriname

In Paraguay’s coronaviru­s war, isolation centers exact a heavy toll

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ASUNCION - Paraguay’s coronaviru­s camps, obligatory for anyone entering the South American country, have garnered praise from internatio­nal health bodies for helping stem the spread of the epidemic. The government calls them the “first line of defense”.

Yet half a dozen people interviewe­d by Reuters who passed through the camps or monitored them raised concerns about the conditions of the hundreds of returning citizens held there. Some said dormitorie­s were cramped, risking the spread of the virus, and people could be confined for many weeks with scarce informatio­n.

Paraguay’s network of 54 mostly military-run shelters illustrate­s how some countries are employing extreme measures to hold back the virus, sometimes at the cost of individual rights, human rights advocates and those who lived in the camps say.

As Latin America has become an epicenter of the pandemic, Paraguay has emerged as an example of successful containmen­t. The landlocked nation of 7 million people has recorded just 1,202 confirmed cases and 11 deaths, one of the region’s lowest.

In neighborin­g Brazil, the government has downplayed social distancing measures and failed to contain the outbreak. With nearly 740,000 cases, Brazil has the second highest number of infections behind the United States and the third highest death toll in the world at 38,000.

Around 65 percent of Paraguay’s confirmed cases have been confined to the shelters, government data show, as the rest of the country has slowly reopened.

“Our hospitals are empty because the shelters are full. It is the first line of defense,” said Federico González, a policy adviser to Paraguay’s president who leads the shelter project, when asked about the conditions.

“The shelters are internatio­nally recognized as one of the factors that enable Paraguay’s good results in its fight against the pandemic,” he told Reuters.

Reuters was not able to confirm cases of infection within the centers and was not granted access to the shelters. Lieutenant Colonel Víctor Urdapillet­a, a spokesman for the military, said they had received “practicall­y no complaints of discomfort”. However, some of those who went through the shelters say it felt like being detained. Until recently, people had no choice but to stay in the camps for weeks before they could leave. Now those with funds can pay to stay in designated hotels. “Our biggest despair was how crowded it was,” said Paola Canova, 43, an assistant professor at the University of Texas, who flew from the United States on March 20 and was held in a shelter for 17 days. Canova said many people had only the clothes on their back, while a lack of informatio­n created panic. Healthcare profession­als rarely entered the shelter and residents had to notify authoritie­s if someone fell sick, she said.

“If you are healthy you will probably get it at the hostel,” she added, though admitted the shelters had stopped the virus’ spread in the wider population. “But it should be done in a dignified way, respecting people, because we are not animals.” Gonzalez, the presidenti­al adviser, said most of those infected had arrived in Paraguay with the virus but it was possible there was some transmissi­on within the shelters.

(Reuters)

 ??  ?? People sit in a dorm at a facility that quarantine­s people who have entered the country, in an effort to contain the coronaviru­s disease. (Photo:Win 98.5)
People sit in a dorm at a facility that quarantine­s people who have entered the country, in an effort to contain the coronaviru­s disease. (Photo:Win 98.5)

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