Times of Suriname

US immigratio­n officials spread coronaviru­s with detainee transfers

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NEW YORK/LOS ANGELES - Public health specialist­s have for months warned the US government that shuffling detainees among immigratio­n detention centers will expose people to COVID-19 and help spread the disease. US Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t (ICE) has continued the practice, saying it is taking all necessary precaution­s. It turns out the health specialist­s were right, according to a Reuters review of court records and ICE data. The analysis of immigratio­n court data identified 268 transfers of detainees between detention centers in

April, May and June, after hundreds in ICE custody had already tested positive for COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronaviru­s. Half of the transfers Reuters identified involved detainees who were either moved from centers with COVID-19 cases to centers with no known cases, or from centers with no cases to those where the virus had spread. The Reuters tally is likely just a small fraction of all transfers, former ICE officials said. ICE does not release data on detainee moves, and court records capture only a smattering of them. At least one transfer resulted in a super-spreading event, according to emails from ICE and officials at a detention center in Farmville, Virginia, court documents and interviews with more than a dozen detainees at the facility. Until that transfer, only two detainees had tested positive at the Farmville center — both immigrants transferre­d there in late April. They were immediatel­y isolated and monitored and were the only known cases at the facility for more than a month, court records state.

( Reuters )

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